Login / Signup

Clinical and microbiological characteristics of bloodstream infections caused by Enterococcus spp. within internal medicine wards: a two-year single-centre experience.

Tommaso LupiaGianmario RobertoLuca ScaglioneNour ShbakloIlaria De BenedettoSilvia ScabiniSimone Mornese PinnaAntonio CurtoniRossana CavalloFrancesco Giuseppe De RosaSilvia Corcione
Published in: Internal and emergency medicine (2022)
Enterococcal bloodstream infections (E-BSI) constitute the second cause of Gram-positive bacterial BSI in Europe with a high rate of in-hospital mortality. Furthermore, E-BSI treatment is still challenging because of intrinsic and acquired antibiotic resistances. We conducted a retrospective, 2-year, observational, single-centre study to evaluate clinical outcome and risk factors for E-BSI mortality in internal medicine wards. 201patients with E-BSI were included in the analysis. Infection rate was 2.4/1000 days of hospital admission. Most E-BSI were hospital acquired (78.1%). The median age was 68 years. Charlson Comorbidity Index, adjusted for age, was 5 (range 4-6). Patients with E-BSI frequently had at least one invasive device, predominantly a central venous (73%) or a bladder catheter (61.7%). Enterococcus faecium accounted for 47.94% of E-BSI (resistance rate to ampicillin or vancomycin was 22.2 and 23.3%, respectively) and Enterococcus faecalis for 52.08% (resistance rate to ampicillin or vancomycin was 3.1 and 2.2%, respectively). Among all E-BSI, 25% of patients received appropriate therapy. In total, 59% of E-BSI underwent echocardiography. At the multivariate analysis, resistance to vancomycin (OR 2.09, p = 0.025), sepsis (OR 2.57, p = 0.003) and septic shock (OR 3.82, p = 0.004) was a predictor of mortality. No difference in 28-day survival was observed between appropriate or inappropriate treatment, except for endocarditis. However, E-BSI sources in clinical practices are not always properly investigated, including the rule-out of intracardiac vegetations. We did not demonstrate a difference in mortality for inappropriate therapy in the absence of endocarditis in comorbid patients with a long history of medicalization.
Keyphrases