Sepsis related mortality of extremely low gestational age newborns after the introduction of colonization screening for multi-drug resistant organisms

  • Christoph Härtel
  • Kirstin Faust
  • Ingmar Fortmann
  • Alexander Humberg
  • Julia Pagel
  • Clara Haug
  • Reinhard Kühl
  • Bettina Bohnhorst
  • Sabine Pirr
  • Dorothee Viemann
  • Arne Simon
  • Michael Zemlin
  • Silvia Poralla
  • Andreas Müller
  • Natascha Köstlin-Gille
  • Christian Gille
  • Matthias Heckmann
  • Jan Rupp
  • Egbert Herting
  • Wolfgang Göpel

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In 2013 German infection surveillance guidelines recommended weekly colonization screening for multidrug-resistant (MDRO) or highly epidemic organisms for neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and extended hygiene measures based on screening results. It remains a matter of debate whether screening is worth the effort. We therefore aimed to evaluate sepsis related outcomes before and after the guideline update.

METHODS: The German Neonatal Network (GNN) is a prospective cohort study including data from extremely preterm infants between 22 + 0 and 28 + 6 gestational weeks born in 62 German level III NICUs.

RESULTS: Infants treated after guideline update (n = 8.903) had a lower mortality (12.5% vs. 13.8%, p = 0.036), reduced rates for clinical sepsis (31.4 vs. 42.8%, p <  0.001) and culture-proven sepsis (14.4% vs. 16.5%, p = 0.003) as compared to infants treated before update (n = 3.920). In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, nine pathogens of culture-proven sepsis were associated with sepsis-related death, e.g. Pseudomonas aeruginosa [OR 59 (19-180), p <  0.001)]. However, the guideline update had no significant effect on pathogen-specific case fatality, total sepsis-related mortality and culture-proven sepsis rates with MDRO. While the exposure of GNN infants to cefotaxime declined over time (31.1 vs. 40.1%, p <  0.001), the treatment rate with meropenem was increased (31.6 vs. 26.3%, p <  0.001).

CONCLUSIONS: The introduction of weekly screening and extended hygiene measures is associated with reduced sepsis rates, but has no effects on sepsis-related mortality and sepsis with screening-relevant pathogens. The high exposure rate to meropenem should be a target of antibiotic stewardship programs.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2047-2994
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26.08.2020
Externally publishedYes
PubMed 32843080