Burden of serious bacterial infections and multidrug-resistant organisms in an adult population of Nepal: a comparative analysis of minimally invasive tissue sampling …

S Bhattarai, BK Sharma, N Subedi… - Clinical Infectious …, 2021 - academic.oup.com
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2021academic.oup.com
Background Bacterial diseases are the leading cause of mortality globally, and due to
haphazard use of antibiotics, antimicrobial resistance has become an emerging threat.
Methods This cross-sectional observational study utilized a minimally invasive tissue
sampling procedure to determine the cause of death among an adult population. Bacterial
cultures (blood, cerebrospinal fluid, lung tissue) and antibiotic susceptibility were evaluated,
and the results were compared between community and hospital deaths. Results Of 100 …
Background
Bacterial diseases are the leading cause of mortality globally, and due to haphazard use of antibiotics, antimicrobial resistance has become an emerging threat.
Methods
This cross-sectional observational study utilized a minimally invasive tissue sampling procedure to determine the cause of death among an adult population. Bacterial cultures (blood, cerebrospinal fluid, lung tissue) and antibiotic susceptibility were evaluated, and the results were compared between community and hospital deaths.
Results
Of 100 deceased persons studied, 76 (76%) deaths occurred in the community and 24 (24%) in the hospital. At least 1 bacterial agent was cultured from 86 (86%) cases; of these, 74 (86%) had a bacterial disease attributed as the primary cause of death, with pneumonia (35, 47.3%), sepsis (33, 44.6%), and meningitis (3, 4.1%) most common. Of 154 bacterial isolates (76.6% from the community and 23.4% from the hospital) detected from 86 culture-positive cases, 26 (16.8%) were multidrug-resistant (MDR). Klebsiella species were the most common (13 of 26) MDR organisms. The odds of getting an MDR Klebsiella infection was 6-fold higher among hospital deaths compared with community deaths (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.37–26.40; P = .017) and almost 23-fold higher (CI, 2.45–213.54; P = .006) among cases with prior antibiotic use compared to those without.
Conclusions
High incidence of serious bacterial infections causing death of adults in the community, with most MDR organisms isolated from hospitalized cases, calls for robust surveillance mechanisms and infection prevention activities at the community level and evidence-driven antibiotic stewardship in healthcare settings.
Oxford University Press
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