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– Patients who are carriers of extended-spectrum beta lactamase–producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-B) before colorectal surgery are at more than double the risk of surgical site infection, despite a standard prophylactic antibiotic regimen.

Surgical site infections (SSIs) occurred in 23% of those who tested positive for the pathogens preoperatively, compared with 10.5% of ESBL-B–negative patients – a significant increased risk of 2.25, Yehuda Carmeli, MD, said at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases annual congress.

ESBL-B was not the infective pathogen in most infection cases, but being a carrier increased the likelihood of an ESBL-B SSI. ESBL-B was the pathogen in 7.2% of the carriers and 1.6% of the noncarriers. However, investigators are still working to determine if the species present in the wound infection are the same as the ones present at baseline, said Dr. Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.

Extended-spectrum ß-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBLs) bacteria, in this case, Escherichia coli.
CDC/James Arche/Illustrators: Alissa Eckert and Jennifer Oosthuizen
But clearly, he said, the presence of ESBL-B before colorectal surgery is a risk that can’t be ignored – and that can’t be reduced with traditional preoperative precautions. A better alternative for these patients would most likely be a carbapenem. Dr. Carmeli’s colleague, Amir Nutman, MD, explored this idea in a related study, which also was presented at the meeting. It determined that ertapenem was a much better choice, cutting surgical site infections by 41% in ESBL-B carriers

All of these results are emerging from the WP4 study, which was carried out in three hospitals in Serbia, Switzerland, and Israel. Designed as a before-and-after trial, it tested the theory that identifying ESBL carriers and targeting presurgical antibiotic prophylaxis could improve their surgical outcomes.

WP4 was one of five studies in the multinational R-GNOSIS project. “Resistance in Gram-Negative Organisms: Studying Intervention Strategies” is a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria. From 2012 to 2017, WP4 enrolled almost 4,000 adults scheduled to undergo colorectal surgery (excluding appendectomy or minor anorectal procedures).

Several of the studies were reported at ECCMID 2018.

 

 


This portion of R-GNOSIS was intended to investigate the relationship between ESBL-B carriage and postoperative surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients.

The study comprised 3,626 patients who were preoperatively screened for ESBL-B within 2 weeks of colorectal surgery. The ESBL-B carriage rate was 15.3% overall, but ranged from 12% to 20% by site. Of the carriers, 222 were included in this study sample. They were randomly matched with 444 noncarriers.

Anywhere from 2 weeks to 2 days before surgery, all of the patients received a standard prophylactic antibiotic. This was most often an infusion of 1.5 g cefuroxime plus 500 mg metronidazole. Other cephalosporins were allowed at the clinician’s discretion.

Patients were a mean of 62 years old. Nearly half (48%) had cardiovascular disease and about a third had undergone a prior colorectal surgical procedure. Cancer was the surgical indication in about 70%. Other indications were inflammatory bowel disease and diverticular disease.
 

 



Dr. Yehuda Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.
Michele G Sullivan/MDedge News
Dr. Yehuda Carmeli
The study’s primary outcome was surgical site infection, which was assessed regularly during the hospital stay, at discharge, and by clinic visit or telephone call 30 days after discharge. The secondary outcomes were deep space surgical site infections and infections caused specifically by ESBL-B. ESBL-B was significantly associated with both surgical site infection (OR 2.25) and deep space infection (OR 2.25).

A multivariate analysis controlled for age, cardiovascular disease, indication for surgery, and whether the procedure included a rectal resection, retention of drain at the surgical site, or stoma. The model also controlled for National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance score, a three-point scale that estimates surgical infection risk. Among this cohort, 48% were at low risk, 43% at moderate risk, and 10% at high risk.

Dr. Carmeli made no financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Carmeli et al, ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1133.

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– Patients who are carriers of extended-spectrum beta lactamase–producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-B) before colorectal surgery are at more than double the risk of surgical site infection, despite a standard prophylactic antibiotic regimen.

Surgical site infections (SSIs) occurred in 23% of those who tested positive for the pathogens preoperatively, compared with 10.5% of ESBL-B–negative patients – a significant increased risk of 2.25, Yehuda Carmeli, MD, said at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases annual congress.

ESBL-B was not the infective pathogen in most infection cases, but being a carrier increased the likelihood of an ESBL-B SSI. ESBL-B was the pathogen in 7.2% of the carriers and 1.6% of the noncarriers. However, investigators are still working to determine if the species present in the wound infection are the same as the ones present at baseline, said Dr. Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.

Extended-spectrum ß-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBLs) bacteria, in this case, Escherichia coli.
CDC/James Arche/Illustrators: Alissa Eckert and Jennifer Oosthuizen
But clearly, he said, the presence of ESBL-B before colorectal surgery is a risk that can’t be ignored – and that can’t be reduced with traditional preoperative precautions. A better alternative for these patients would most likely be a carbapenem. Dr. Carmeli’s colleague, Amir Nutman, MD, explored this idea in a related study, which also was presented at the meeting. It determined that ertapenem was a much better choice, cutting surgical site infections by 41% in ESBL-B carriers

All of these results are emerging from the WP4 study, which was carried out in three hospitals in Serbia, Switzerland, and Israel. Designed as a before-and-after trial, it tested the theory that identifying ESBL carriers and targeting presurgical antibiotic prophylaxis could improve their surgical outcomes.

WP4 was one of five studies in the multinational R-GNOSIS project. “Resistance in Gram-Negative Organisms: Studying Intervention Strategies” is a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria. From 2012 to 2017, WP4 enrolled almost 4,000 adults scheduled to undergo colorectal surgery (excluding appendectomy or minor anorectal procedures).

Several of the studies were reported at ECCMID 2018.

 

 


This portion of R-GNOSIS was intended to investigate the relationship between ESBL-B carriage and postoperative surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients.

The study comprised 3,626 patients who were preoperatively screened for ESBL-B within 2 weeks of colorectal surgery. The ESBL-B carriage rate was 15.3% overall, but ranged from 12% to 20% by site. Of the carriers, 222 were included in this study sample. They were randomly matched with 444 noncarriers.

Anywhere from 2 weeks to 2 days before surgery, all of the patients received a standard prophylactic antibiotic. This was most often an infusion of 1.5 g cefuroxime plus 500 mg metronidazole. Other cephalosporins were allowed at the clinician’s discretion.

Patients were a mean of 62 years old. Nearly half (48%) had cardiovascular disease and about a third had undergone a prior colorectal surgical procedure. Cancer was the surgical indication in about 70%. Other indications were inflammatory bowel disease and diverticular disease.
 

 



Dr. Yehuda Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.
Michele G Sullivan/MDedge News
Dr. Yehuda Carmeli
The study’s primary outcome was surgical site infection, which was assessed regularly during the hospital stay, at discharge, and by clinic visit or telephone call 30 days after discharge. The secondary outcomes were deep space surgical site infections and infections caused specifically by ESBL-B. ESBL-B was significantly associated with both surgical site infection (OR 2.25) and deep space infection (OR 2.25).

A multivariate analysis controlled for age, cardiovascular disease, indication for surgery, and whether the procedure included a rectal resection, retention of drain at the surgical site, or stoma. The model also controlled for National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance score, a three-point scale that estimates surgical infection risk. Among this cohort, 48% were at low risk, 43% at moderate risk, and 10% at high risk.

Dr. Carmeli made no financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Carmeli et al, ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1133.

 

– Patients who are carriers of extended-spectrum beta lactamase–producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-B) before colorectal surgery are at more than double the risk of surgical site infection, despite a standard prophylactic antibiotic regimen.

Surgical site infections (SSIs) occurred in 23% of those who tested positive for the pathogens preoperatively, compared with 10.5% of ESBL-B–negative patients – a significant increased risk of 2.25, Yehuda Carmeli, MD, said at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases annual congress.

ESBL-B was not the infective pathogen in most infection cases, but being a carrier increased the likelihood of an ESBL-B SSI. ESBL-B was the pathogen in 7.2% of the carriers and 1.6% of the noncarriers. However, investigators are still working to determine if the species present in the wound infection are the same as the ones present at baseline, said Dr. Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.

Extended-spectrum ß-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBLs) bacteria, in this case, Escherichia coli.
CDC/James Arche/Illustrators: Alissa Eckert and Jennifer Oosthuizen
But clearly, he said, the presence of ESBL-B before colorectal surgery is a risk that can’t be ignored – and that can’t be reduced with traditional preoperative precautions. A better alternative for these patients would most likely be a carbapenem. Dr. Carmeli’s colleague, Amir Nutman, MD, explored this idea in a related study, which also was presented at the meeting. It determined that ertapenem was a much better choice, cutting surgical site infections by 41% in ESBL-B carriers

All of these results are emerging from the WP4 study, which was carried out in three hospitals in Serbia, Switzerland, and Israel. Designed as a before-and-after trial, it tested the theory that identifying ESBL carriers and targeting presurgical antibiotic prophylaxis could improve their surgical outcomes.

WP4 was one of five studies in the multinational R-GNOSIS project. “Resistance in Gram-Negative Organisms: Studying Intervention Strategies” is a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria. From 2012 to 2017, WP4 enrolled almost 4,000 adults scheduled to undergo colorectal surgery (excluding appendectomy or minor anorectal procedures).

Several of the studies were reported at ECCMID 2018.

 

 


This portion of R-GNOSIS was intended to investigate the relationship between ESBL-B carriage and postoperative surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients.

The study comprised 3,626 patients who were preoperatively screened for ESBL-B within 2 weeks of colorectal surgery. The ESBL-B carriage rate was 15.3% overall, but ranged from 12% to 20% by site. Of the carriers, 222 were included in this study sample. They were randomly matched with 444 noncarriers.

Anywhere from 2 weeks to 2 days before surgery, all of the patients received a standard prophylactic antibiotic. This was most often an infusion of 1.5 g cefuroxime plus 500 mg metronidazole. Other cephalosporins were allowed at the clinician’s discretion.

Patients were a mean of 62 years old. Nearly half (48%) had cardiovascular disease and about a third had undergone a prior colorectal surgical procedure. Cancer was the surgical indication in about 70%. Other indications were inflammatory bowel disease and diverticular disease.
 

 



Dr. Yehuda Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.
Michele G Sullivan/MDedge News
Dr. Yehuda Carmeli
The study’s primary outcome was surgical site infection, which was assessed regularly during the hospital stay, at discharge, and by clinic visit or telephone call 30 days after discharge. The secondary outcomes were deep space surgical site infections and infections caused specifically by ESBL-B. ESBL-B was significantly associated with both surgical site infection (OR 2.25) and deep space infection (OR 2.25).

A multivariate analysis controlled for age, cardiovascular disease, indication for surgery, and whether the procedure included a rectal resection, retention of drain at the surgical site, or stoma. The model also controlled for National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance score, a three-point scale that estimates surgical infection risk. Among this cohort, 48% were at low risk, 43% at moderate risk, and 10% at high risk.

Dr. Carmeli made no financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Carmeli et al, ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1133.

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Key clinical point: ESBL-B colonization increased the risk of surgical site infections after colorectal surgery, despite use of standard preoperative antibiotics.

Major finding: ESBL-B carriage more than doubled the risk of a colorectal surgical site infection by (OR 2.25).

Study details: The prospective study comprised 222 carriers and 444 noncarriers.

Disclosures: The study is part of the R-GNOSIS project, a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria.

Source: Carmeli Y et al. ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1130.

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