新出现的可乐定耐药性:印度一家三级医疗中心重症监护室的经验。

Q3 Medicine
Mayank Sharma, Afzal Azim, Chinmoy Sahu, Banani Poddar, Mohan Gurjar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:随着越来越多的分离生物对现有抗菌药物产生耐药性,对现有抗菌药物产生耐药性已成为一个重大的健康问题。随着碳青霉烯类耐药性的升级,多年来多粘菌素 B/E(秋水仙素)的使用有所增加,这反过来又导致了全球范围内秋水仙素耐药性的出现。包括印度在内的东南亚国家对秋水仙素耐药性的现有数据非常有限,尤其是在重症监护室(ICU)环境中。我们研究的主要目的是分析多粘菌素 B/E(秋水仙碱)耐药培养阳性患者的临床概况,并研究他们在重症监护室的住院时间和出院时的治疗效果:这项观察性、单中心、前瞻性研究于 2020 年 1 月至 2021 年 12 月期间在印度北部一家拥有 1600 张床位的三级医疗机构的 20 张床位成人 ICU 中进行,该 ICU 同时为内科和外科患者服务。在这项研究中,所有入住重症监护病房、培养检测出多粘菌素 B/E(可乐定)耐药菌的成人患者(定义为年龄大于 18 岁者)均被列为病例,所有培养检测出多粘菌素 B/E(可乐定)敏感菌的成人重症监护病房患者(年龄大于 18 岁)均被列为对照组。研究人员收集了临床、实验室和人口统计学参数,以及重症监护室变量(如病情严重程度、重症监护室住院时间、机械通气、休克天数、肾脏替代疗法(RRT)等)和出院时的结果。可乐定耐药性和可乐定最小抑菌浓度(MIC)的鉴定是根据临床和实验室标准协会(CLSI)指南进行的。统计分析采用 Mann-Whitney U 检验、费雪精确检验和二元逻辑回归:共纳入 28 例病例和 55 例对照(n = 83)进行分析。腹腔[胃肠道(GI)]败血症是重症监护室入院时最常见的诊断(41.8%),肺炎克雷伯菌是病例(96.4%)和对照组(50.9%)中最常见的分离菌种。病例和对照组最常见的革兰氏阴性菌分离部位是血液(71.4% 对 74.5%),其次是深层脓液(21.4% 对 23.64%)。病例对四环素类药物最敏感,占 60.7%,其次是头孢唑肟-阿维巴坦。在重症监护室曾使用过可乐定、使用过单内酰胺类药物和重症监护室住院天数等因素被认为是可乐定耐药性的独立预测因素。病例与对照组之间的总死亡率没有统计学差异(P-值为 0.38):结论:延长重症监护室的住院时间、在重症监护室接触过单内酰胺类药物以及在过去 90 天内曾接触过可乐定等因素都是可乐定耐药性的独立预测因素。最常见的耐药菌是肺炎双球菌,最常见的分离部位是血液。对秋水仙素耐药的患者和对秋水仙素敏感的患者的死亡率没有差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emerging Colistin Resistance: Experience from an Intensive Care Unit of a Tertiary Care Center in India.

Background: Resistance to the currently available classes of antimicrobials has emerged as a major health concern, with a growing number of isolated organisms demonstrating resistance to available antimicrobials. With the escalation of carbapenem resistance, the use of polymyxin B/E (colistin) has increased over the years, which has, in turn, contributed to the worldwide emergence of colistin resistance. The available data on colistin resistance from Southeast Asian nations, including India, is limited, especially in intensive care unit (ICU) settings. The primary objective of our study was to analyze the clinical profile of patients with polymyxin B/E (colistin) resistant positive cultures and to study their outcome in terms of length of ICU stay and outcome at discharge.

Materials and methods: This observational, single-center, prospective study was conducted in a 20-bed adult ICU serving both medical and surgical patients at a 1,600-bed tertiary care institute in northern India between Jan 2020 and Dec 2021. In this study, all adult patients, defined as individuals older than 18 years of age, admitted to our ICU with cultures detecting polymyxin B/E (colistin) resistant organisms were included as cases, and all adult ICU patients (age >18 years) with polymyxin B/E (colistin) sensitive cultures were taken as controls. Clinical, laboratory, and demographic parameters, along with ICU variables like severity of illness, length of ICU stay, mechanical ventilation, days of shock, renal replacement therapy (RRT), etc., and outcome at discharge were collected. Identification of resistance to colistin and minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of colistin is based on Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) guidelines. For statistical analysis, Mann-Whitney U test, Fisher's exact test, and binary logistic regression were used.

Results: Twenty-eight cases and 55 controls (n = 83) were included for analysis. Abdominal [gastrointestinal (GI)] sepsis was the most common diagnosis (41.8%) at admission to the ICU, and Klebsiella pneumoniae was the most common species isolated in both the cases (96.4%) and the controls (50.9%). The most common site of isolation of Gram-negative bacteria in both cases and controls was blood (71.4 vs 74.5%), followed by deep-seated pus (21.4 vs 23.64%). The most common class of drugs to which the cases were sensitive was tetracyclines in 60.7%, followed by ceftazidime-avibactam. Factors such as prior exposure to colistin, exposure to monobactams in the ICU, and ICU stay in days were identified as independent predictors for colistin resistance. Overall mortality was not statistically different between cases and controls (p -value 0.38).

Conclusion: Factors like prolonged ICU stay, exposure to monobactams in the ICU, and a history of prior exposure to colistin in the previous 90 days are independent predictors of colistin resistance. The most common organism to develop colistin resistance identified was K. pneumoniae, and the most common site of isolation was blood. There was no difference in mortality between colistin-resistant and colistin-sensitive patients.

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