1. Changing aetiology, clinical features, antimicrobial resistance, and outcomes of bloodstream infection in neutropenic cancer patients
- Author
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L. Jimenez, Antonella F. Simonetti, Marta Bodro, M. Cisnal, Eva González-Barca, Carlota Gudiol, Eva Domingo-Domenech, Jordi Carratalà, and Fe Tubau
- Subjects
changing epidemiology ,Adult ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,bacteraemia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neutropenia ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,bloodstream infection ,Bacteremia ,Drug resistance ,Antimicrobial resistance ,Gram-Positive Bacteria ,Young Adult ,Antibiotic resistance ,Internal medicine ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,Gram-Negative Bacteria ,medicine ,Mucositis ,cancer ,Humans ,Young adult ,Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Infectious Diseases ,Parenteral nutrition ,Hematologic Neoplasms ,Etiology ,Female ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,business ,Central venous catheter - Abstract
Recent changes in the management of patients with haematological malignancies might have influenced the aetiology, characteristics, antimicrobial resistance and outcomes of bloodstream infection (BSI) during neutropenia. We compared 272 episodes of BSI in adult neutropenic patients with cancer prospectively collected from January 1991 to December 1996 (first period), when quinolone prophylaxis was used, with 283 episodes recorded from January 2006 to March 2010 (second period), when antibacterial prophylaxis was stopped. Patients in the second period were significantly older and were more likely to have graft-versus-host disease and a urinary catheter in place, whereas the presence of a central venous catheter, parenteral nutrition, corticosteroids and antifungal and quinolone prophylaxis, were more frequent in the first period. More patients in the first period had mucositis and soft-tissue infection as the origin of BSI, but an endogenous source was more common during the second. Gram-positive BSI was more frequent in the first period (64% versus 41%; p
- Published
- 2013
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