In this 5-year prospective study of 242 bone marrow transplantation (BMT) recipients from whom daily blood cultures via the indwelling Broviac/Hickman catheter were obtained, there was a median of 35 catheter-days during hospitalization, mean of 40 days, and total of 9,667 catheter-days which were divided almost equally between neutropenic (4,771) and non-neutropenic (4,896) days. One hundred twenty (50%) patients had a total of 161 episodes of nosocomial bacterial or candidal infections. Overall, 81 (33%) patients experienced 100 episodes of catheter-related infections and 90 (37%) patients experienced 112 episodes of septicemia, including 51 episodes of catheter-related septicemia. There was an incidence of 11.59 septicemia episodes, including 5.28 catheter-related septicemia episodes, 2.48 colonization only (without subsequent septicemia), and 2.59 exit site infections only, per 1,000 catheter-days. Over a period of a total of 6,593 afebrile days, 34 (14%) patients developed 40 episodes of colonization, a rate of 6.07 per 1,000 afebrile days, of which 16 developed into septicemia. Twenty-five patients had 1 episode each of exit site infection without bacteremia. There were 10 (4%) septicemia-related deaths, 4 of which were catheter-related; 50% of all deaths involved Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The mortality due to catheter-related septicemic episodes was not greater than that of the non-catheter-related episodes. Neutropenia was found to be a significant risk factor in our study: 76% of the septicemia episodes (85/112) and 65% of the catheter-related infectious episodes (65/100) occurred during neutropenia. There was a higher incidence of septicemic episodes during neutropenia than during non-neutropenic periods, 17.82 versus 5.51 per 1,000 days (p < 0.0001), and a higher rate of catheter-related infections during the neutropenic period, 13.62 versus 7.15 during non-neutropenic days per 1,000 days (0.001). Fourteen of 16 colonization episodes developed into septicemia during neutropenia versus 2/24 during non-neutropenic periods, a rate of 5.47 versus 0.47 per 1,000 afebrile days, respectively (p < 0.0001), and 9/10 deaths occurred during neutropenia.
The purpose of this study was to examine coagulase-negative staphylococcal infections in bone marrow transplantation (BMT) patients with central vein catheters by investigating incidence, clinical relevance, risk factors, methicillin resistance, clinical impact of initial empiric antimicrobial therapy without vancomycin, and management of documented catheter-related infections. A 5-year prospective study was conducted with daily evaluation of 242 BMT patients during hospitalization, including clinical assessment and blood culture via the Hickman/Broviac catheter. If fever or infected appearance occurred, peripheral blood cultures or exit site cultures, respectively, were done. Results showed a septicemia incidence of 7.0%, including in 6 patients following colonization, in 1 patient with tunnel infection, in 1 patient with thrombophlebitis, in 1 patient with exit site infection, and in 8 patients with septicemia of unknown origin. Total colonization incidence was 7%, with colonization only in 11 patients who had 16 episodes; incidence of exit site infection was 3.7%. Age > or = 18 years was the only identified risk factor for developing staphylococcal infection (P = 0.03). Despite a methicillin resistance rate of 45% and omission of vancomycin from the routine initial empiric antimicrobial regimen, the clinical course of coagulase-negative staphylococcal infections was relatively benign. A single patient, who experienced marrow rejection, died on day +31 with septicemia and only one patient experienced microbiological failure with recurrent colonization. Bacteria grown in both aerobic and anaerobic bottles were more likely true bacteremia than contaminant (P = 0.03). We conclude that the hazard of coagulase-negative staphylococcal infection does not mandate inclusion of a glycopeptide in the initial empiric antimicrobial regimen in BMT patients, even during febrile neutropenia. Hickman/Broviac-related staphylococcal infections, except for tunnel infection or thrombophlebitis, can usually be treated successfully without removing the catheter.
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