Sr. Director, Medical Affairs (ret.)
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24. September 2024
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18. Oktober 2024
Article
Antimicrobial resistance is well-recognised to be a major threat to the continuation of modern medicine because of difficult to treat infections due to multiple resistant bacteria, notably gram-negative bacteria (GNB) and vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE), especially in high-risk settings and vulnerable patients where morbidity and mortality from such infections is high1,2. Infection prevention and control programs aim to prevent transmission and colonisation through approaches such as screening of high-risk admissions and isolation or cohorting of individuals known to be colonized. However, the actual risk of colonized patients going on to develop infections has been difficult to quantify, limiting a full understanding of the benefits of screening programs and of prophylactic or pre-emptive treatments for colonized patients.
A very detailed systematic review and meta-analysis3 covering 44 cohort studies across 14 countries, aimed to provide the best estimate of the risks of infection to patients with gastro-intestinal carriage of multi-drug resistant GNB or VRE, calculated as a cumulative incidence or incidence density of infection, taking into consideration well-defined time frames. In summary, the authors were able to show that the risk of infection is highest for those patients colonized with gram negative bacteria resistant to carbapenem antibiotics (approximately 4 per 1000 patient days), and that this risk is nearly five times higher than the risk for patients colonized with VRE.
The authors acknowledge some limitations with this study, particularly around the fact that analysis was limited by regional differences in the number of data sources and incidence data available. Nevertheless, this type of data will become increasingly relevant as healthcare institutions make difficult decisions regarding prioritising of active surveillance programs and considering which patients would benefit the most from planned prophylactic or preemptive antibiotic treatment regimens.
Referenzen:
MEHR