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Anaerobic bloodstream infections in Italy (ITANAEROBY): A 5-year retrospective nationwide survey

Authors :
Stefano Di Bella
Roberta Maria Antonello
Gianfranco Sanson
Alberto Enrico Maraolo
Daniele Roberto Giacobbe
Chiara Sepulcri
Simone Ambretti
Richard Aschbacher
Laura Bartolini
Mariano Bernardo
Alessandra Bielli
Marina Busetti
Davide Carcione
Giulio Camarlinghi
Edoardo Carretto
Tiziana Cassetti
Chiara Chilleri
Francesco Giuseppe De Rosa
Saveria Dodaro
Raffaele Gargiulo
Francesca Greco
Anna Knezevich
Jari Intra
Tommaso Lupia
Erika Concialdi
Gabriele Bianco
Francesco Luzzaro
Carola Mauri
Gianluca Morroni
Adriana Mosca
Elisabetta Pagani
Eva Maria Parisio
Claudio Ucciferri
Chiara Vismara
Roberto Luzzati
Luigi Principe
Di Bella, Stefano
Antonello, Roberta Maria
Sanson, Gianfranco
Maraolo, Alberto Enrico
Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto
Sepulcri, Chiara
Ambretti, Simone
Aschbacher, Richard
Bartolini, Laura
Bernardo, Mariano
Bielli, Alessandra
Busetti, Marina
Carcione, Davide
Camarlinghi, Giulio
Carretto, Edoardo
Cassetti, Tiziana
Chilleri, Chiara
De Rosa, Francesco Giuseppe
Dodaro, Saveria
Gargiulo, Raffaele
Greco, Francesca
Knezevich, Anna
Intra, Jari
Lupia, Tommaso
Concialdi, Erika
Bianco, Gabriele
Luzzaro, Francesco
Mauri, Carola
Morroni, Gianluca
Mosca, Adriana
Pagani, Elisabetta
Parisio, Eva Maria
Ucciferri, Claudio
Vismara, Chiara
Luzzati, Roberto
Principe, Luigi
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Introduction: A lack of updated data on the burden and profile of anaerobic bloodstream infections (ABIs) exists. We assessed the incidence of ABIs and trends in antimicrobial resistance in anaerobes isolated from blood in Italy. Material and methods: We conducted a retrospective study on 17 Italian hospitals (2016-2020). Anaerobes isolated from blood culture and their in vitro susceptibility profiles (EUCAST-interpreted) were registered and analyzed. Results: A total of 1960 ABIs were identified. The mean age of ABIs patients was 68.6 ± 18.5 years, 57.6% were males. The overall incidence rate of ABIs was 1.01 per 10.000 patient-days. Forty-seven% of ABIs occurred in medical wards, 17% in ICUs, 14% in surgical wards, 7% in hemato-oncology, 14% in outpatients. The three most common anti-anaerobic tested drugs were metronidazole (92%), clindamycin (89%) and amoxicillin/clavulanate (83%). The three most common isolated anaerobes were Bacteroides fragilis (n = 529), Cutibacterium acnes (n = 262) and Clostridium perfringens (n = 134). The lowest resistance rate (1.5%) was to carbapenems, whereas the highest rate (51%) was to penicillin. Clindamycin resistance was >20% for Bacteroides spp., Prevotella spp. and Clostridium spp. Metronidazole resistance was 9.2% after excluding C. acnes and Actinomyces spp. Bacteroides spp. showed an increased prevalence of clindamycin resistance through the study period: 19% in 2016, 33% in 2020 (p ≤ 0.001). Conclusions: Our data provide a comprehensive overview of the epidemiology of ABIs in Italy, filling a gap that has existed since 1995. Caution is needed when clindamycin is used as empirical anti-anaerobic drug.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4e2508a76d98d6cb15436dc7d7f7b040