Bacterial co-infections and secondary infections and their antimicrobial resistance in Covid-19 patients during the second pandemic wave.

IF 1.6 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH GMS Hygiene and Infection Control Pub Date : 2024-03-05 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3205/dgkh000465
Ruchita Attal, Vijayshri Deotale
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Abstract

Background: COVID-19 pneumonia with an unusual outbreak is considered a new, global public health threat. Microbiological characterization of co-infections in patients with COVID-19 is important, and antimicrobial use is high. We aimed to describe microbiologically confirmed co-infections and the antimicrobial resistance of the causative pathogens.

Method: From January to December 2020, we tested 1,301 patients who were COVID-19 positive. We received clinical samples (blood, respiratory and sterile body fluids) of COVID-19 patients who were suspected to have bacterial co-infections. Samples were processed and antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed based on the CLSI recommendation. Demographic, clinical, laboratory and outcome data of those with positive cultures were collected.

Result: A total of 1301 COVID-19 patients (568 from the COVID ward and 733 from ICU) were admitted to the Covid care ward of a tertiary care hospital. 363 samples were sent for culturing and testing antibiotic susceptibility, of which 131 (36%) were found to be culture-positive (90 from ICUs, 41 from wards). Out of the 143 total isolates thus obtained from 131 samples, the majority (62.2%) were Gram-negative bacteria, and most of them were (70.8%) multidrug resistant.

Discussion: Bacterial co-infection in patients with COVID-19 is more commonly reported in the severely ill hospitalized individuals (58%), particularly in the ICU (73.3%) setting. In terms of mortality, almost half of co-infected patients died (51.1%). In most of them, the cause of death was found to be sepsis with post-COVID ARDS (58%).

Conclusion: Co-infection in COVID-19 patients may affect the outcome in terms of increasing the hospital stay.

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第二波大流行期间 Covid-19 病人的细菌合并感染和继发感染及其抗菌药耐药性。
背景:COVID-19 肺炎的异常爆发被认为是一种新的全球公共卫生威胁。COVID-19 患者合并感染的微生物学特征非常重要,而且抗菌药物的使用率很高。我们旨在描述经微生物学证实的合并感染以及致病病原体的抗菌药耐药性:2020年1月至12月,我们对1301名COVID-19阳性患者进行了检测。我们接收了疑似合并细菌感染的 COVID-19 患者的临床样本(血液、呼吸道和无菌体液)。样本经处理后,根据 CLSI 建议进行了抗菌药物药敏试验。收集了培养阳性患者的人口统计学、临床、实验室和结果数据:结果:一家三级医院的科维护理病房共收治了 1301 名 COVID-19 患者(568 名来自 COVID 病房,733 名来自重症监护病房)。其中 131 例(36%)培养阳性(90 例来自重症监护室,41 例来自病房)。在从 131 个样本中分离出的 143 个细菌中,大多数(62.2%)为革兰氏阴性菌,其中大部分(70.8%)具有多重耐药性:讨论:COVID-19 患者的细菌合并感染多见于重症住院患者(58%),尤其是重症监护病房患者(73.3%)。就死亡率而言,近一半合并感染的患者死亡(51.1%)。在大多数患者中,死亡原因是败血症合并 COVID 后 ARDS(58%):结论:COVID-19 患者合并感染可能会影响治疗效果,延长住院时间。
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GMS Hygiene and Infection Control
GMS Hygiene and Infection Control PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
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审稿时长
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