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Are hematopoietic cell transplant recipients with Gram‐negative bacteremia spending more time outpatient while on intravenous antibiotics? Addressing trends over 10 years at a single center

Authors :
Steven Roncaioli
Ania Sweet
Margaret Lind
Steven A. Pergam
Mohamed L. Sorror
Amanda I. Phipps
Catherine Liu
Frank P. Tverdek
Andrew Bryan
Source :
Immunity, Inflammation and Disease, Vol 9, Iss 4, Pp 1786-1794 (2021), Immunity, Inflammation and Disease
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction The increasing proportion of outpatient allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplants (HCTs) coupled with increased access of once‐daily broad‐spectrum antibiotics and evidence that outpatient antibiotic treatment may be safer and less costly than inpatient treatment, suggest that allogeneic HCT recipients with Gram‐negative rod bacteremia (GNRBs) are increasingly being treated in ambulatory care settings. Methods Using data from the first GNRB event that occurred within the first 100 days posttransplantation among allogeneic HCT recipients transplanted at a single center between 2007 and 2016, we estimated the temporal trends in GNRB incidence and treatment management of GNRBs and identified if patient or infection characteristics impacted observed trends. Results A total of 11% (238/2165) of the observed allogeneic HCT recipients experienced ≥1 GNRB with available resistance data and contributed antibiotic treatment time. Patients, on average, received 55.1% of their antibiotic treatment in an outpatient setting and we observed a significant decline in the proportion of treatment time spent outpatient (crude: −3.3% [95% confidence interval: −5.0, −1.6%]). We observed similar declines in the proportion of treatment time spent outpatient among patients with similar GNRB and pretransplant complexity factors but not among patients with similar posttransplant complications (p value: .165). Conclusion These results suggest that, despite increased availability of outpatient suitable treatment options, allogeneic HCT recipients with GNRBs received less treatment in outpatient settings. However, among patients with similar posttransplant complications, the lack of significant decline suggests that treatment location decisions remained consistent for patients with similar posttransplant complications. These findings suggest the need for additional interventions targeting outpatient antibiotic treatment among allogeneic HCT recipients with GNRBs.<br />Over a 10‐year period, Gram‐negative rod bacteremia (GNRB) incidence and the proportion of GNRBs treatment time spent outpatient declined significantly. However, among patients with similar posttransplant complications, no decline in outpatient treatment was observed. This suggests that the decline in outpatient antibiotic days may be linked to increased frequency of posttransplant complications.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20504527
Volume :
9
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Immunity, Inflammation and Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e8bb148e7c8971332666ceb354ccc71b