15 research outputs found

    Granulicatella adiacens and Abiotrophia defectiva Native Vertebral Osteomyelitis: Three Cases and Literature Review of Clinical Characteristics and Treatment Approach

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    Granulicatella adiacens and Abiotrophia defectiva are an increasingly recognized cause of osteoarticular infections. We describe two cases of G. adiacens and one case of A. defectiva native vertebral osteomyelitis (NVO) and review all published cases. Nine cases of G. adiacens NVO and two cases of A. defectiva NVO were previously described. Patients were usually middle-aged men, and classical risk factors for NVO were present in half of the cases. Concomitant bacteremia was reported in 78.6% of cases, and concurrent infective endocarditis occurred in 36.4% of this sub-group of patients. Many different antibiotic schemes were recorded, with median treatment duration of 6weeks. In the most recent reports, glycopeptides represented the most frequent empirical therapy, possibly due to the increasing emergence of G. adiacens and A. defectiva penicillin-resistant strains. Stabilization surgery was rarely required (14.3% of cases), and clinical cure was generally achieved. In conclusion, Granulicatella spp. and Abiotrophia spp. NVO is rare but increasingly described. A total antibiotic course of six weeks seems to be appropriate for noncomplicated cases, and clinical outcome is generally favorable

    Pneumocystosis as a Complication of H1N1 Influenza A Infection in an HIV-Positive Patient on Effective cART

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    H1N1 influenza A virus can affect the immune system, causing lymphopenia. This might be of great concern for HIV individuals undergoing effective antireroviral therapy (cART). We report the first confirmed case of H1N1-induced AIDS and Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia in an HIV-positive woman on effective cART since 2006

    Changing in the post-surgery infective complications following the shortening of the antibiotic prophylaxis in the patients undergoing skin dermal substitutes reconstruction

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    Background: Bioengineered skin dermal substitutes (SDS) represent a novel therapeutic opportunity for restoring damaged tissue, both in massive deep burns, extensive full-thickness wounds, and reconstruction after cancer resection. Antimicrobial prophylaxis duration in such procedures has not been well established yet. The aim of the study was to evaluate the changing of infective complications following shortening of perioperative prophylaxis in patients undergoing surgical reconstruction with SDS. Material & Methods: Infective complications at the site of SDS were compared in two groups of patients: subjects undergoing surgical reconstruction between September 2014 and January 2016 (PERIOD A) who received a >24h-antibiotic prophylaxis, and subjects undergoing surgical reconstruction between May 2016 and June 2017 (PERIOD B) who received a ≤24h-antibiotic prophylaxis. Differences in the incidence of infection and pathogen prevalence were explored. Univariate linear regression analysis was performed to evaluate the risk factors for infection (sex, age, ASA code, perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis, site of SDS intervention, type of SDS, dimensions of surgical area, chronic renal impairment, and diabetes mellitus). Results: Between September 2014 and June 2017, 116 patients underwent a surgical reconstruction with a SDS. The 66.4% (n=77) of the study population was male, and the mean age was 73 years (22-92 years). Seventy-eight patients (67.2%) were positive for hypertension, 20 (17.2%) for diabetes mellitus, 16 (13.8%) for chronic renal impairment, 22 (19%) were former or current smokers, and 45 (38.8%) had an ASA code ≥3. In the 94.8% of the patients (n=110) the reason of surgical intervention was a skin cancer. Surgical SDS reconstruction involved the scalp in 44 cases (37.9%), the face in 28 (24.1%), the chest in 11 (9.5%), the arm or the hand in 9 (7.8%), the leg in 12 (10.3%) and the foot in 12 (10.3%). Among 116 patients undergoing SDS surgical reconstruction, 62 (53.4%) received a >24h-prophylaxis and 54 (46.6%) received a ≤24h-prophylaxis. The average duration of prophylaxis in the 2 groups of patients was 6.6 days and 0.5 day, respectively. Overall incidence rate of infection was 20.7% (24/116). The most frequently isolated pathogen was S. aureus (41.6%), followed by P. aeruginosa (29.1%), P. mirabilis (8.3%), and E. faecalis (4.1%). Patients undergoing SDS reconstruction in limb/foot had higher infection rate in comparison with those undergoing SDS reconstruction in chest/head (33.3% and 15.6%, respectively; p=0.034). No differences in the infection rate were observed between the patients who received >24h or ≤24h-antibiotic prophylaxis (22.5% and 18.5%, respectively; p=0.590). The two groups resulted similar for gender, age, comorbidities, ASA score, and type of skin cancer. No significant differences in pathogen prevalence were found (p=0.692). Conclusion: Antibiotic prophylaxis reduction to 24 hours or less demonstrated to be beneficial to patients undergoing surgical reconstruction with SDS. Shortening of antibiotic prophylaxis did not increase infection rate, and it allowed to reduce of 6 days-per-patient the antibiotic exposure

    Infective complications in patients undergoing surgical reconstruction with dermal matrix: the Modena experience

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    Background: Bioengineered skin dermal substitutes (SDS) represent a novel therapeutic opportunity for restoring damaged tissue1,2,3. Antimicrobial prophylaxis duration in such procedures has not been well established yet. The aim of the study was to evaluate the changing of infective complications following shortening of perioperative prophylaxis in patients undergoing surgical reconstruction with SDS. Material & Methods: Infective complications at the site of SDS were compared in 2 groups: subjects undergoing surgical reconstruction between September 2014 and January 2016 (PERIOD A) who received a >24H-antibiotic-prophylaxis, and between May 2016 and June 2017 (PERIOD B) who received a ≤24H-antibiotic-prophylaxis. Differences in the incidence of infection and pathogen prevalence were explored. Results: Between September 2014 and June 2017, 116 patients underwent a surgical reconstruction with a SDS. The mean age was 73-years, 77 were male (66.4%), 78 (67.2%) were positive for hypertension, 20 (17.2%) for diabetes mellitus, 16 (13.8%) for chronic renal impairment, 22 (19%) were smokers, and 45 (38.8%) had an ASA score ≥3. In the 94.8% (n=110) the reason of surgical intervention was a skin cancer. Surgical SDS reconstruction involved the scalp in 44 cases (37.9%), the face in 28 (24.1%), the chest in 11 (9.5%), the limbs in 33 (28.5%). Among 116 patients, 62 (53.4%) received >24H-antibiotic and 54 (46.6%) ≤24H-antibiotic-prophylaxis. The average duration of prophylaxis in the 2 groups of patients was 6.6 days and 0.5 day, respectively. Overall incidence rate of infection was 20.7% (24/116). The most frequently isolated pathogen was S. aureus (41.6%), followed by P. aeruginosa (29.1%), P. mirabilis (8.3%), and E. faecalis (4.1%). Patients undergoing SDS reconstruction in limbs had higher infection rate in comparison with chest/head (33.3% and 15.6%, respectively; p=0.034). No differences in the infection rate were observed between the patients who received >24H or ≤24H-antibiotic-prophylaxis (22.5% and 18.5%, respectively; p=0.590). The two groups resulted similar for gender, age, comorbidities, ASA score, and type of skin cancer. Discussion: As far as we know, this is the first study that compared two perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis regimes in patients undergoing SDS reconstruction. Comparing the two patient groups (≤24-hour and >24-hour prophylaxis), no differences in the rate of infection were found. The result is very important: it shows that prolongation of prophylaxis in this type of surgical patients does not reduce the rate of infection. Shortening of antibiotic prophylaxis allowed to reduce of 6 days-per-patient the antibiotic exposure. It was surprising that only the reconstruction of the limbs, in comparison with other sites, was associated with a higher risk of infection (33.3 and 15.7 respectively). Nor the most critical patients (with an ASA score ≥3), nor patients undergoing major surgical reconstructions (surgical area >60 cm2) resulted associated with a higher risk. Conclusion: Antibiotic prophylaxis reduction to 24 hours or less demonstrated to be beneficial to patients undergoing surgical reconstruction with SDS. Shortening of antibiotic prophylaxis did not increase infection rate, and it allowed a reduction of 6 days-per-patient the antibiotic exposure. Randomized and controlled trials, with greater population, could give a more accurate response on the duration of antibiotic prophylaxis in patients undergoing surgical SDS reconstruction

    Epidemiology and Outcomes of Bloodstream Infections in HIV-Patients during a 13-Year Period

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    No data on antibiotic resistance in bloodstream infection (BSI) in people living with HIV (PLWH) exist. The objective of this study was to describe BSI epidemiology in PLWH focusing on multidrug resistant (MDR) organisms. A retrospective, single-center, observational study was conducted including all positive blood isolates in PLWH from 2004 to 2017. Univariable and multivariable GEE models using binomial distribution family were created to evaluate the association between MDR and mortality risk. In total, 263 episodes (299 isolates) from 164 patients were analyzed; 126 (48%) BSI were community-acquired, 137 (52%) hospital-acquired. At diagnosis, 34.7% of the patients had virological failure, median CD4 count was 207/μL. Thirty- and 90-day mortality rates were 24.2% and 32.4%, respectively. Thirty- and 90-day mortality rates for MDR isolates were 33.3% and 46.9%, respectively (p < 0.05). Enterobacteriaceae were the most prevalent microorganisms (29.8%), followed by Coagulase-negative staphylococci (21.4%), and S. aureus (12.7%). In BSI due to MDR organisms, carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae and methicillin-resistant S. aureus were associated with mortality after adjustment for age, although this correlation was not confirmed after further adjustment for CD4 < 200/μL. In conclusion, BSI in PLWH is still a major problem in the combination antiretroviral treatment era and it is related to a poor viro-immunological status, posing the question of whether it should be considered as an AIDS-defining event

    Changing scenarios of HIV treatment in Southern Africa

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    In this paper we will analyse the assesment criteria for road map to control the HIV pandemic in SSA within the context of the changing scenarios of HIV disease in the third millennium. They include: effective medical interventions; political will; community participatio

    Treatment rate for HCV in the direct acting antivirals era in HIV co-infected patients: data from an italian cohort

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    New Direct Antiviral Agents (DAA) are now effective in HCV infection; persons living with HIV (PLWH) were undertreated. Aim of this study was to describe the management of HCV treatment in a HIV/HCV cohort during a 16 years period
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