Abstract

Introduction: Bacteremia remains a major cause of life-threatening complications in patients receiving anticancer chemotherapy. The spectrum and susceptibility profiles of causative microorganisms differ with time and place. Data from Lebanon are scarce. We aim at evaluating the epidemiology of bacteremia in cancer patients in a university hospital in Lebanon, emphasizing antibiotic resistance and risk factors of multi-drug resistant organism (MDRO)-associated bacteremia.Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective study of 75 episodes of bacteremia occurring in febrile neutropenic patients admitted to the hematology-oncology unit at Makassed General Hospital, Lebanon, from October 2009-January 2012. It corresponds to epidemiological data on bacteremia episodes in febrile neutropenic cancer patients including antimicrobial resistance and identification of risk factors associated with third generation cephalosporin resistance (3GCR) and MDRO-associated bacteremia.Results: Out of 75 bacteremias, 42.7% were gram-positive (GP), and 57.3% were gram-negative (GN). GP bacteremias were mostly due to methicillin-resistant coagulase negative staphylococci (28% of total bacteremias and 66% of GP bacteremias). Among the GN bacteremias, Escherichia coli (22.7% of total, 39.5% of GN organisms) and Klebsiella pneumoniae(13.3% of total, 23.3% of GN organisms) were the most important causative agents. GN bacteremia due to 3GC sensitive (3GCS) bacteria represented 28% of total bacteremias, while 29% were due to 3GCR bacteria and 9% were due to carbapenem-resistant organisms. There was a significant correlation between bacteremia with MDRO and subsequent intubation, sepsis and mortality. Among potential risk factors, only broad spectrum antibiotic intake >4 days before bacteremia was found to be statistically significant for acquisition of 3GCR bacteria. Using carbapenems or piperacillin/tazobactam>4 days before bacteremia was significantly associated with the emergence of MDRO (p < 0.05).Conclusion: Our findings have major implications for the management of febrile neutropenia, especially in breakthrough bacteremia and fever when patients are already on broadspectrum antibiotics. Emergence of resistance to 3GCs and, to a lesser extent, to carbapenems in GN isolates has to be considered seriously in our local guidelines for empiric treatment of febrile neutropenia, especially given that their occurrence was proven to be associated with poorer outcomes.

Highlights

  • Bacteremia remains a major cause of life-threatening complications in patients receiving anticancer chemotherapy

  • Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective study of 75 episodes of bacteremia occurring in febrile neutropenic patients admitted to the hematology-oncology unit at Makassed General Hospital, Lebanon, from October 2009-January 2012.It corresponds to epidemiological data on bacteremia episodes in febrile neutropenic cancer patients including antimicrobial resistance and identification of risk factors associated with third generation cephalosporin resistance (3GCR) and multi-drug resistant organism (MDRO)-associated bacteremia

  • The purpose of this study is to evaluate the epidemiology of bacteremia occurring during neutropenia in adult cancer chemotherapy patients in a university hospital in Lebanon, with a special emphasis on the prevalence, susceptibility profile and risk factors associated with bacteremia caused by third generation cephalosporin-resistant (3GCR) and carbapenem-resistant bacteria

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteremia remains a major cause of life-threatening complications in patients receiving anticancer chemotherapy. The type of microorganisms isolated on blood culture from febrile neutropenic patients varies with time and place (Jones, 1999; Dettenkofer et al, 2003; Wisplinghoff et al, 2003b; Irfan et al, 2008; Freifeld et al, 2011). At the beginning of the use of cytotoxic chemotherapy in the 1960s and 1970s in cancer patients, gram-negative bacteria (GNB) were the most common organisms causing bacteremia in febrile neutropenic patients (Jones, 1999; Irfan et al, 2008); at the turn of the century, the most common bacterial pathogens isolated from blood cultures were coagulase-negative staphylococci (Dettenkofer et al, 2003; Wisplinghoff et al, 2003b; Freifeld et al, 2011)

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