Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.

Mortality in very low birth weight infants following microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections varies with the type of causative pathogen. Given evidence from other studies that infections with gram negative bacteria and fungi cause a higher case fatality risk. We tried to confirm this i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brar C Piening, Christine Geffers, Petra Gastmeier, Frank Schwab
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5481023?pdf=render
_version_ 1818268153425166336
author Brar C Piening
Christine Geffers
Petra Gastmeier
Frank Schwab
author_facet Brar C Piening
Christine Geffers
Petra Gastmeier
Frank Schwab
author_sort Brar C Piening
collection DOAJ
description Mortality in very low birth weight infants following microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections varies with the type of causative pathogen. Given evidence from other studies that infections with gram negative bacteria and fungi cause a higher case fatality risk. We tried to confirm this in a nation-wide multi-center trial.A cohort of 55,465 very low birth weight infants from 242 neonatal departments participating in the German national neonatal infection surveillance system NEO-KISS was used to investigate differences in the case fatality risk of microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections according to individual pathogens. Cox proportional hazard regression analyses were performed with the outcomes death and time from microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections. The results were adjusted to the recorded risk factors and hospital and department characteristics.A total of 4 094 very low birth weight infants with microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections were included in the analysis. The crude case fatality risk was 5.7%. The Cox proportional hazard regression analysis with adjustment for available risk factors revealed that microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections caused by Klebsiella spp. (HR 3.17 CI95 1.69-5.95), Enterobacter spp. (HR 3.42 CI95 1.86-6.27), Escherichia coli (HR 3.32 CI95 1.84-6.00) and Serratia spp. (HR 3.30 CI95 1.44-7.57) were associated with significantly higher case fatality risk compared to Staphylococcus aureus. After adjusting, case fatality risk of Candida albicans causing microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections was not higher than that of S. aureus.In very low birth weight infants, bloodstream infections caused by gram negative pathogens have an increased case fatality risk compared to bloodstream infections caused by gram positive pathogens. This should be considered for prevention and therapy. Further research should address the specific risk factors for case fatality of C. albicans bloodstream infections.
first_indexed 2024-12-12T20:33:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-59fdab5be54547678e4e1eb3b72884b0
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-12T20:33:58Z
publishDate 2017-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-59fdab5be54547678e4e1eb3b72884b02022-12-22T00:12:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01126e018013410.1371/journal.pone.0180134Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.Brar C PieningChristine GeffersPetra GastmeierFrank SchwabMortality in very low birth weight infants following microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections varies with the type of causative pathogen. Given evidence from other studies that infections with gram negative bacteria and fungi cause a higher case fatality risk. We tried to confirm this in a nation-wide multi-center trial.A cohort of 55,465 very low birth weight infants from 242 neonatal departments participating in the German national neonatal infection surveillance system NEO-KISS was used to investigate differences in the case fatality risk of microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections according to individual pathogens. Cox proportional hazard regression analyses were performed with the outcomes death and time from microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections. The results were adjusted to the recorded risk factors and hospital and department characteristics.A total of 4 094 very low birth weight infants with microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections were included in the analysis. The crude case fatality risk was 5.7%. The Cox proportional hazard regression analysis with adjustment for available risk factors revealed that microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections caused by Klebsiella spp. (HR 3.17 CI95 1.69-5.95), Enterobacter spp. (HR 3.42 CI95 1.86-6.27), Escherichia coli (HR 3.32 CI95 1.84-6.00) and Serratia spp. (HR 3.30 CI95 1.44-7.57) were associated with significantly higher case fatality risk compared to Staphylococcus aureus. After adjusting, case fatality risk of Candida albicans causing microbiology confirmed primary bloodstream infections was not higher than that of S. aureus.In very low birth weight infants, bloodstream infections caused by gram negative pathogens have an increased case fatality risk compared to bloodstream infections caused by gram positive pathogens. This should be considered for prevention and therapy. Further research should address the specific risk factors for case fatality of C. albicans bloodstream infections.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5481023?pdf=render
spellingShingle Brar C Piening
Christine Geffers
Petra Gastmeier
Frank Schwab
Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.
PLoS ONE
title Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.
title_full Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.
title_fullStr Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.
title_full_unstemmed Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.
title_short Pathogen-specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection.
title_sort pathogen specific mortality in very low birth weight infants with primary bloodstream infection
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5481023?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT brarcpiening pathogenspecificmortalityinverylowbirthweightinfantswithprimarybloodstreaminfection
AT christinegeffers pathogenspecificmortalityinverylowbirthweightinfantswithprimarybloodstreaminfection
AT petragastmeier pathogenspecificmortalityinverylowbirthweightinfantswithprimarybloodstreaminfection
AT frankschwab pathogenspecificmortalityinverylowbirthweightinfantswithprimarybloodstreaminfection