Abstract

Acinetobacter baumannii bacteremia is becoming more prevalent and is associated with increasing morbidity and mortality. Escalating antibacterial resistance further contributes to therapeutic dilemmas, enhanced infection control support and poorer outcomes in patients infected with these bacteria. A retrospective analysis of patients whose blood cultures produced A. baumannii from January 2007 through January 2013 was performed. Data regarding the epidemiologic features, antimicrobial susceptibility and outcomes of patients with A. baumannii bacteremia were collected and analyzed. Sixty A. baumannii isolates each from a different patient were identified. The Charlson Comorbidity Index (≥3) was the greatest among patients with multi-drug resistance (MDR) compared to intermediate drug resistance (IDR) and pan-sensitive (PS) A. baumannii. The mean APACHE II scores for MDR, IDR and PS A. baumannii bacteremia were 21, 15 and 11, respectively (P < 0.05, MDR v. PS). Seventy-three percent of the isolates were resistant to quinolones, 44% to piperacillin/tazobactam, 45% to amikacin, 22% to imipenem, 0% to ticarcillin/clavulanate, and 0% to polymyxin. Among 28 patients with MDR A. baumannii bacteremia, 20 received inadequate empiric treatment, and 16 of these patients died (80%). Of the remaining eight patients with MDR bacteremia who received adequate empiric antibiotics, only two died (25%). The severity of underlying illness, degree of antibiotic resistance and receiving inadequate initial antibiotic therapy are associated with mortality among patients with bacteremia due to A. baumannii.

Highlights

  • Acinetobacter baumannii bacteremia has become a global problem with a high incidence of resistance and mortality [1] [2]

  • Decreasing susceptibility to carbapenems, amikacin, sulbactam and the polymyxins can result in the absence of any single effective agent for treatment of infections caused by A. baumannii [5]

  • The Charlson Comorbidity Index (≥3) was greatest among patients with multi-drug resistance (MDR) compared to intermediate drug resistance (IDR) and PS A. baumannii

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Summary

Introduction

Acinetobacter baumannii bacteremia has become a global problem with a high incidence of resistance and mortality [1] [2]. A recent survey of blood stream infections (BSIs) in the United States ranks A. baumannii 10th with an incidence rate of 0.6/10,000 admissions [3]. A study surveying BSIs in US hospitals from 1995-1998 documented a crude mortality rate of 32% caused by Acinetobacter species [4]. In a more recent investigation, crude mortality rates were 34% for all patients, 43% in patients from intensive care units (ICUs), and 16% in non-ICU patients [3]. Escalating antibacterial resistance in A. baumannii coupled with institutional transmission continues to overwhelm infection control personnel, infectious disease specialists, pharmacists and microbiologists [5] [6]

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