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Characterisation and antimicrobial resistance of sepsis pathogens in neonates born in tertiary care centres in Delhi, India: a cohort study

Authors :
Chandra Kumar Natarajan
Vikas Manchanda
Manorama Deb
Longjam Shilhenba Meite
Sony K. Varghese
Arti Kapil
Kailash Chandra
Shuchita Gupta
Jincymol George
Anju Sinha
Malabika Roy
Deb S. K. Prakash
Nidhi Goel
Madan Singh
Neelam Manral
Vandana Rani
Aanchal Wadhwa
K C Aggarwal
Vikas Dabbas
Mamta Dhoopar
Manoj Modi
Harish Chellani
Anni Therasa
Steffi Wilson
Pratibha Gupta
Jenifer Chinnu Abraham
Rajni Gaind
Deepak Kumar
Sugandha Arya
D. Vimala
Kunj Bihari Gupta
Simi P. Johny
Sreenivas Vishnubhatla
Somi S. Suresh
Manju Saksena
Kaustav Banerjee
Josmi Philip
Manjari Chaudhari
Dhanya Alex
Ann Rainu Jose
Benu Varghese
Abraham Mary
Abhinov Kher
K. S. Seena
Rosemol Mathachan
Purva Mathur
Kumar Surinder
Siddarth Ramji
Anjali Thareja
Angel George
Joginder Singh Nim
Sreemol Sarasan
S. K. Prakash
Vidya Kumari
Akhilesh Kumar
Deeksha Mittal
Mamta Jajoo
Simi Thomas
Ashok K. Deorari
Asha Susan Philip
Mariya Thomas
Deepali Agarwal
M. S. Prasad
Vinod K. Paul
Suman Chaurasia
Shyam Narayan Yadav
Sant Lal Meenakshi
Dona Jose
Charu
Neeraj Gupta
Reeta Rasaily
Rimjhim Johri
Hitender Gautam
Ashok Kumar
Honey Mary James
Anil Mor
M. Jeeva Sankar
Aggarwal
Manish Sethi
Chander Prakash Yadav
Surinder Kumar
Mitali Bhardwaj
Vasantha Muthuswamy
Nisha Rani
Sumita Saluja
Zulfikar Ali Bhuttoo
Shub Darshan
Suman Singh
Ramesh Agarwal
Anu Thukral
Vandana Gulati
Ashish Jain
Source :
The Lancet Global Health. 4:e752-e760
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Background: Sepsis is one of the most common causes of neonatal deaths globally. Most sepsis-related deaths occur in low-income and middle-income countries, where the epidemiology of neonatal sepsis remains poorly understood. Most of these countries lack proper surveillance networks, hampering accurate assessment of the burden of sepsis, implementation of preventive measures, and investment in research. We report results of neonates born in hospital from a multicentre collaboration on neonatal sepsis. Methods: In this cohort study, dedicated research teams prospectively followed up neonates born in one of three tertiary care centres in Delhi, India (Vardhaman Mahavir Medical College, Maulana Azad Medical College, and All India Institute of Medical Sciences [coordinating centre]) and subsequently admitted to the intensive care unit. Neonates were followed up daily until discharge or death. On clinical suspicion, neonates underwent sepsis work-up including blood cultures. The isolated organisms were identified and tested for antimicrobial susceptibility. We defined Gram-negative isolates resistant to any three of five antibiotic classes (extended-spectrum cephalosporins, carbapenems, aminoglycosides, fluoroquinolones, and piperacillin-tazobactam) as multidrug resistant. Findings: 13 530 neonates of 88 636 livebirths were enrolled between July 18, 2011, and Feb 28, 2014. The incidence of total sepsis was 14·3% (95% CI 13·8–14·9) and of culture-positive sepsis was 6·2% (5·8–6·6). Nearly two-thirds of total episodes occurred at or before 72 h of life (defined as early onset; 1351 [83%] of 1980). Two-thirds (645 [64%]) of 1005 isolates were Gram-negative including, Acinetobacter spp (22%), Klebsiella spp (17%), and Escherichia coli (14%). The pathogen mix in early-onset sepsis did not differ from that of late-onset sepsis (ie, after 72 h). High rates of multidrug resistance were observed in Acinetobacter spp (181/222, 82%), Klebsiella spp (91/169, 54%), and Escherichia coli (52/137, 38%) isolates. Meticillin resistance prevailed in 61% (85/140) of coagulase-negative staphylococci and 38% (43/114) of Staphylococcus aureus isolates. Nearly a quarter of the deaths were attributable to sepsis. The population-attributable risks of mortality were 8·6% in culture-negative sepsis, 15·7% in culture-positive sepsis by multidrug-resistant organisms, and 12·0% in culture-positive sepsis by non-multidrug-resistant organisms. Interpretation: The high incidence of sepsis and alarming degree of antimicrobial resistance among pathogens in neonates born in tertiary hospitals underscore the need to understand the pathogenesis of early-onset sepsis and to devise measures to prevent it in low-income and middle-income countries. Funding: Indian Council of Medical Research

Details

ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c592f8de03107c8ba11b67f0deeefef6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s2214-109x(16)30148-6