Abstract

As part of ongoing surveillance of infection in the haematology and oncology units at Belfast City Hospital, microbiologically documented bloodstream infections over three 12-month periods 1994/5, 1998/9 and 1999/00 were reviewed. Gram-positive organisms were the most common cause of blood stream infection in the haematology unit causing 66%, 56% and 64% of episodes of monomicrobial bacteraemia in 1994/5, 1998/9 and 1999/00, respectively. In haematology patients, enterococci have emerged as an important cause of bacteraemia, with increasing levels of glycopeptide resistance, and the ‘non-fermenting Gram-negative rods other than Pseudomonas aeruginosa’ are an increasingly common cause of monomicrobial and polymicrobial bacteraemia. In oncology patients, Gram-negative organisms (predominantly enterobacteriaceae) were more common than Gram-positive organisms, causing 50% and 54% of monomicrobial bacteraemia in 1998/9 and 1999/00, respectively. Changes in patient population, underlying diseases and chemotherapeutic agents may explain these findings. The spectrum of infection seen in haematology and oncology patients changes as management evolves. Ongoing co-operation between haematologists, oncologists and microbiologists is important to detect trends in epidemiology, which can be used to design empirical antibiotic regimens and guide infection control policies.

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