Abstract

Abstract The epidemiology of bacteremic infections in neutropenic patients has shifted from a previous majority involving gram-positive cocci to an increasing preponderance of gram-negative Enterobacteriaceae species and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Recommended empiric antimicrobial treatment regimens include an antipseudomonal β-lactam or carbapenem agent while considering risk factors for the possibility of extended-spectrum β-lactamase– or carbapenemase-producing organisms. The addition of vancomycin is generally reserved for the chance of gram-positive cocci infection, principally in patients with central intravascular catheters or soft tissue infections. Persistent or breakthrough bacteremia despite receiving this glycopeptide drug should prompt the clinician to contemplate not only the possibility of vancomycin-resistant enterococci, but also other organisms that possess intrinsic resistance vancomycin, including Leuconostoc species.

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