Aetiology and use of antibiotics in pregnancy-related infections: results of the WHO Global Maternal Sepsis Study (GLOSS), 1-week inception cohort.

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
Carolina C Ribeiro-do-Valle, Mercedes Bonet, Vanessa Brizuela, Edgardo Abalos, Adama Baguiya, Fernando Bellissimo-Rodrigues, Mihaela Budianu, Lucian Puscasiu, Marian Knight, David Lissauer, Catherine Dunlop, Shevin T Jacob, Sadia Shakoor, Luis Gadama, Bouchra Assarag, João Paulo Souza, Jose G Cecatti
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Pregnancy-related infections are important contributors to maternal sepsis and mortality. We aimed to describe clinical, microbiological characteristics and use of antibiotics by source of infection and country income, among hospitalized women with suspected or confirmed pregnancy-related infections.

Methods: We used data from WHO Global Maternal Sepsis Study (GLOSS) on maternal infections in hospitalized women, in 52 low-middle- and high-income countries conducted between November 28th and December 4th, 2017, to describe the frequencies and medians of maternal demographic, obstetric, and clinical characteristics and outcomes, methods of infection diagnosis and causative pathogens, of single source pregnancy-related infection, other than breast, and initial use of therapeutic antibiotics. We included 1456 women.

Results: We found infections of the genital (n = 745/1456, 51.2%) and the urinary tracts (UTI) (n = 531/1456, 36.5%) to be the most frequent. UTI (n = 339/531, 63.8%) and post-caesarean skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI) (n = 99/180, 55.0%) were the sources with more culture samples taken and microbiological confirmations. Escherichia coli was the major uropathogen (n = 103/118, 87.3%) and Staphylococcus aureus (n = 21/44, 47.7%) was the commonest pathogen in SSTI. For 13.1% (n = 191) of women, antibiotics were not prescribed on the same day of infection suspicion. Cephalosporins (n = 283/531, 53.3%) were the commonest antibiotic class prescribed for UTI, while metronidazole (n = 303/925, 32.8%) was the most prescribed for all other sources. Ceftriaxone with metronidazole was the commonest combination for the genital tract (n = 98/745, 13.2%) and SSTI (n = 22/180, 12.2%). Metronidazole (n = 137/235, 58.3%) was the most prescribed antibiotic in low-income countries while cephalosporins and co-amoxiclav (n = 129/186, 69.4%) were more commonly prescribed in high-income countries.

Conclusions: Differences in antibiotics used across countries could be due to availability, local guidelines, prescribing culture, cost, and access to microbiology laboratory, despite having found similar sources and pathogens as previous studies. Better dissemination of recommendations in line with antimicrobial stewardship programmes might improve antibiotic prescription.

妊娠相关感染的病因和抗生素的使用:世界卫生组织全球孕产妇败血症研究(GLOSS)1周起始队列的结果。
背景:与妊娠相关的感染是导致孕产妇败血症和死亡的重要原因。我们旨在描述疑似或确诊妊娠相关感染的住院妇女的临床、微生物学特征以及抗生素的使用情况,并按感染源和国家收入进行分类:我们使用了2017年11月28日至12月4日期间在52个中低收入和高收入国家进行的世界卫生组织全球孕产妇败血症研究(GLOSS)中关于住院妇女中孕产妇感染的数据,以描述孕产妇人口统计学、产科和临床特征及结果、感染诊断方法和致病病原体、除乳腺以外的单一来源妊娠相关感染的频率和中位数,以及治疗性抗生素的初始使用情况。我们共纳入了 1456 名妇女:结果:我们发现生殖道感染(745/1456,51.2%)和泌尿道感染(UTI)(531/1456,36.5%)最为常见。UTI(n = 339/531,63.8%)和剖腹产后皮肤和软组织感染(SSTI)(n = 99/180,55.0%)是采集培养样本和微生物确认较多的感染源。大肠埃希菌是主要的尿路病原体(n = 103/118,87.3%),金黄色葡萄球菌(n = 21/44,47.7%)是 SSTI 中最常见的病原体。13.1%的妇女(n = 191)在怀疑感染的当天未使用抗生素。头孢菌素类(n = 283/531,53.3%)是治疗UTI最常用的抗生素,而甲硝唑类(n = 303/925,32.8%)是治疗所有其他病因最常用的抗生素。头孢曲松联合甲硝唑是生殖道(n = 98/745,13.2%)和 SSTI(n = 22/180,12.2%)最常见的联合用药。在低收入国家,甲硝唑(n = 137/235,58.3%)是最常用的抗生素,而在高收入国家,头孢菌素和联合阿莫西林(n = 129/186,69.4%)更常用:尽管发现的病源和病原体与之前的研究相似,但各国在抗生素使用上的差异可能是由于可用性、当地指南、处方文化、成本和微生物实验室的可及性造成的。根据抗菌药物管理计划更好地传播建议可能会改善抗生素处方。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
49
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Annals of Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobials considers good quality, novel and international research of more than regional relevance. Research must include epidemiological and/or clinical information about isolates, and the journal covers the clinical microbiology of bacteria, viruses and fungi, as well as antimicrobial treatment of infectious diseases. Annals of Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobials is an open access, peer-reviewed journal focusing on information concerning clinical microbiology, infectious diseases and antimicrobials. The management of infectious disease is dependent on correct diagnosis and appropriate antimicrobial treatment, and with this in mind, the journal aims to improve the communication between laboratory and clinical science in the field of clinical microbiology and antimicrobial treatment. Furthermore, the journal has no restrictions on space or access; this ensures that the journal can reach the widest possible audience.
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