Abstract

BackgroundStaphylococcus lugdunensis is a coagulase negative Staphylococcus species and frequent human skin commensal with the potential for aggressive infection. Guidance surrounding S. lugdunensis bacteremia (SLB) from a single set of blood cultures is lacking. MethodsA multicenter, retrospective cohort of patients with SLB from at least one blood culture set within the University of Maryland Medical System from 2015 to 2019 is presented. Objectives are to describe baseline characteristics, compare the clinical status and treatment course, and to evaluate the clinical outcomes among patients with SLB in single versus multiple sets. ResultsThirty-six patients were included, 24 with one set of blood cultures positive for S lugdunensis and 12 with multiple sets. Baseline characteristics were similar between the groups, though patients with SLB in multiple sets were more commonly on hemodialysis (P = 0.029). Central lines were the most common source (17%). Most (97%) fulfilled systemic inflammatory response syndrome or Souvenir criteria, had an infectious focus on imaging, or had a second positive culture site. Most (78%) were treated as clinically significant. Patients with multiple positive sets were more commonly treated with antibiotics for >2 weeks (P = 0.02). ConclusionsSLB was rare and occurred more frequently as a single set of positive cultures. Patient characteristics and clinical courses were similar between single and multiple set groups. Given the potential severity of S. lugdunensis bacteremia it seems prudent to treat S. lugdunensis in a single blood culture as true bacteremia, pending larger studies and guidelines.

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