The high prevalence of KPC-Kp enteric carriage in ICU patients at admission dictates the importance of implementation of infection control measures and strict antibiotic policies prior to ICU transfer.
Many risk factors are involved in KPC-Kp BSI among ICU patients. The high mortality in patients with KPC-KP BSI in the ICU requires the implementation of appropriate infection control measures.
A significant increase in carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (CP-Kp) bacteraemias has been observed worldwide. The objective of the present work was to study the risk factors and predictors of mortality of CP-Kp bacteraemias among critically ill patients. During a 4-year period (2012-3015), a matched 1:2 case-control study was conducted. Klebsiella pneumoniae was identified by Vitek 2 technology. Antibiotic susceptibility was performed by the agar disc diffusion method and Etest. The presence of the bla , bla and bla genes was confirmed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Epidemiologic data were collected from the intensive care unit (ICU) computerised database. One hundred and thirty-nine patients who developed a CP-Kp bacteraemia were matched with 278 patients. The majority of isolates (128; 92.1%) carried the bla gene, seven carried both bla and bla, three bla and one carried bla. Risk factors for the development of CP-Kp bacteraemia were administration of tigecycline and number of antibiotics administered prior to CP-Kp bacteraemia. Overall, the 30-day mortality was 36.0%. Multivariate analysis revealed septic shock, Simplified Acute Physiology Score II (SAPS II) upon infection onset, adjunctive corticosteroid administration and parenteral nutrition as independent predictors of mortality, while treatment with a combination of appropriate antibiotics was identified as a predictor of good prognosis. Among septic shock patients (n = 74), Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score upon infection onset, adjunctive corticosteroid administration and strain carrying the bla gene were independently associated with mortality, while the administration of combination treatment was identified as a predictor of a good prognosis. The administration of tigecycline predisposes to the induction of bacteraemia. Appropriate antibiotic treatment is associated with better survival, while concomitant corticosteroid treatment is associated with mortality.
Chromogenic chromID® CARBA medium was compared with CDC method and MacConkey agar with imipenem for its performance in detecting carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) during a faecal screening surveillance program. Double rectal swabs were collected from patients hospitalized in the ICU. One swab was inoculated onto the solid media chromID® CARBA and MacConkey agar with imipenem, while the other was tested according to CDC protocol. Suspected colonies from all procedures were identified to species level and tested for their susceptibility to carbapenems by phenotypic tests. All carbapenem non-susceptible isolates were tested by the modified Hodge test (MHT) and synergy tests. Positive results were confirmed by PCR testing for carbapenemase gene detection. Performance of all three procedures applied was statistically analyzed as compared to MHT and PCR results for the presence of carbapenemase-encoding genes. Out of 177 rectal samples tested, 86 samples were found to contain one or more CPE verified by molecular detection of carbapenemase encoding genes among isolated Enterobacteriaceae. Sensitivity of chromID® CARBA was 96.5 % in clinical samples. Specificity was 91.2 % at the reading level and 100.0 % after Gram staining. chromID® CARBA performed with high accuracy among the phenotypic methods applied, giving early results.
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