Cancers (Nov 2023)

Bacteremia in Patients with Solid Organ Cancer: Insights into Epidemiology and Antibiotic Consumption

  • Begoña de Dios-García,
  • Guillermo Maestro,
  • Carmen Díaz-Pedroche,
  • Wagner Parra,
  • Óscar Campos,
  • María Ángeles Orellana,
  • José Manuel Caro,
  • Carlos Lumbreras,
  • Manuel Lizasoain

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15235561
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 23
p. 5561

Abstract

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Epidemiology and risk factors associated to bacterial resistance in solid organ cancer (SOC) patients has been barely described. This retrospective monocentric study analyzed clinical variables in SOC patients who developed bacteremia between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2022. We described rates of bacterial resistance in Gram negative bacteria (80.6%): E. coli-ESBL, K. pneumoniae-ESBL, Carbapenem-Resistant K. pneumoniae and Meropenem-Resistant P. aeruginosa, as well as antibiotic consumption, and compared these rates between the medical and oncology wards. In total, we included 314 bacteremias from 253 patients. SOC patients are frequently prescribed antibiotics (40.8%), mainly fluoroquinolones. Nosocomial bacteremia accounted for 18.2% of the cases and only 14.3% of patients were neutropenic. Hepatobiliary tract was the most frequent tumor (31.5%) and source of bacteremia (38.5%). Resistant bacteria showed a decreased rate of resistance during the years studied in the oncology ward. Both K-ESBL and K-CBP resistance rates decreased (from 45.8% to 20.0%, and from 29.2% to 20.0%, respectively), as well as MRPA, which varied from a resistance rate of 28% to 16.7%. The presence of a urinary catheter (p p = 0.002) were risk factors for bacterial resistance. Identifying either of these risk factors could help in guiding antibiotic prescription for SOC patients.

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