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Organisms causing secondary pneumonias in COVID-19 patients at 5 UK ICUs as detected with the FilmArray test

Authors :
Ann Marie Swart
David M. Livermore
David Brealey
Virve I. Enne
Hala Kandil
Juliet High
Charlotte Russell
Kerry Roulston
Emmanuel Wey
Suveer Singh
Zaneeta Dhesi
Valerie J. Page
Antony Colles
Robert J. Parker
Damien Mack
Vanya Gant
Justin O'Grady
Daniel Martin
Julie Barber
Susan Stirling
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

IntroductionSeveral viral respiratory infections - notably influenza - are associated with secondary bacterial infection and additional pathology. The extent to which this applies for COVID-19 is unknown. Accordingly, we aimed to define the bacteria causing secondary pneumonias in COVID-19 ICU patients using the FilmArray Pneumonia Panel, and to determine this test’s potential in COVID-19 management.MethodsCOVID-19 ICU patients with clinically-suspected secondary infection at 5 UK hospitals were tested with the FilmArray at point of care. We collected patient demographic data and compared FilmArray results with routine culture.ResultsWe report results of 110 FilmArray tests on 94 patients (16 had 2 tests): 69 patients (73%) were male, the median age was 59 yrs; 92 were ventilated. Median hospital stay before testing was 14 days (range 1-38). Fifty-nine (54%) tests were positive, with 141 bacteria detected. Most were Enterobacterales (n=55, includingKlebsiellaspp. [n= 35]) orStaphylococcus aureus(n=13), as is typical of hospital and ventilator pneumonia. Community pathogens, includingHaemophilus influenzae(n=8) andStreptococcus pneumoniae(n=1), were rarer. FilmArray detected one additional virus (Rhinovirus/Enterovirus) and no atypical bacteria. Fewer samples (28 % vs. 54%) were positive by routine culture, and fewer species were reported per sample;Klebsiellaspecies remained the most prevalent pathogens.ConclusionFilmArray had a higher diagnostic yield than culture for ICU COVID-19 patients with suspected secondary pneumonias. The bacteria found mostly were Enterobacterales,S. aureusandP. aeruginosa, as in typical HAP/VAP, but withKlebsiellaspp. more prominent. We found almost no viral co-infection. Turnaround from sample to results is around 1h 15 min compared with the usual 72h for culture, giving prescribers earlier data to inform antimicrobial decisions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e4c34a6ae61d41e635eb4002d5338f99
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.06.22.20131573