Although fungal urinary tract infections are an increasing nosocomial problem, the significance of funguria is still not clear. This multicenter prospective surveillance study of 861 patients was undertaken to define the epidemiology, management, and outcomes of funguria. Diabetes mellitus was present in 39% of patients, urinary tract abnormalities in 37.7%, and malignancy in 22.2%; only 10.9% had no underlying illnesses. Concomitant nonfungal infections were present in 85%, 90% had received antimicrobial agents, and 83.2% had urinary tract drainage devices. Candida albicans was found in 51.8% of patients and Candida glabrata in 15.6%. Microbiological and clinical outcomes were documented for 530 (61.6%) of the 861 patients. No specific therapy for funguria was given to 155 patients, and the yeast cleared from the urine of 117 (75.5%) of them. Of the 116 patients who had a catheter removed as the only treatment, the funguria cleared in 41 (35.3%). Antifungal therapy was given to 259 patients, eradicating funguria in 130 (50.2%). The rate of eradication with fluconazole was 45.5%, and with amphotericin B bladder irrigation it was 54.4%. Only 7 patients (1.3%) had documented candidemia. The mortality rate was 19.8%, reflecting the multiple serious underlying illnesses found in these patients with funguria.
A prospective, observational study of 110 patients with serious infections due to Enterococcus spp. in 6 university and community teaching hospitals in Connecticut was conducted to define the epidemiology of community and nosocomial serious enterococcal infections and to determine risk factors, including antibiotic resistances, that contribute to outcome. Serious community and nosocomial enterococcal infections involved a variety of sites, and antibiotic resistance was common. Types of infection by major organ system were cardiovascular, 54% (catheter-related bacteremia 28%, primary bacteremia 18%, endocarditis 6%, septic thrombophlebitis 1%); intra-abdominal, 13% (including cholangitis, 6%); renal, 13%; skin and soft tissue, 5%; bone and joint, 4%; pleuropulmonary, 4%; central nervous system, 3%; deep surgical wound, 3%; and endometritis, 2%. Sixty-one percent of infections were nosocomial; 48% of these occurred in the intensive care unit. Enterococcus faecium was responsible for 20% of all infections. Antibiotic resistances among the infections included high-level gentamicin resistance (26%), ampicillin resistance (10%), and vancomycin resistance (8%). Clinical cure was achieved in 64% of patients; 6.8% of patients relapsed, 6.8% had recurrence of the infection with a different pathogen, and overall mortality was 23%. Ampicillin resistance and a high acute physiology and chronic health evaluation (APACHE) II score were highly predictive of lack of cure.
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