Volume 67, Issue 2 , Pages 180-184, June 2010
Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteremia: factors correlated with clinical and microbiologic outcomes☆
Abstract
We undertook a retrospective cohort study describing general outcomes and specific factors associated with positive outcomes in bacteremia due to carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP). Forty-eight patients were included, of which 42% died at 30 days. Forty-two percent of patients were in septic shock at the time of the first positive blood culture, and 42% were recipients of solid organ transplants. Lack of microbiologic eradication at 7 days was independently associated with 30-day mortality. Adjunctive procedures performed for source control and microbiologic eradication at 7 days were associated with a favorable clinical response at 7 days. Time to initiation and receipt at any time of antimicrobials with in vitro activity against CRKP were not associated with improved survival. Breakthrough bacteremia occurred in 8 cases, all in patients receiving tigecycline. Our data suggest that severity of illness, rapid microbiologic eradication, and source control are crucial factors in the outcomes of patients with CRKP bacteremia.
Keywords: Polymyxin, Tigecycline, Carbapenem, Klebsiella
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☆ Address of institution at which the work was performed: NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Medical Center, 177 Fort Washington Avenue, New York, NY 10032.
PII: S0732-8893(10)00037-4
doi:10.1016/j.diagmicrobio.2010.02.001
© 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 67, Issue 2 , Pages 180-184, June 2010
