4.2 Article

Clinical Management of a Pandrug-Resistant OXA-48 Klebsiella pneumoniae Infection in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

Journal

MICROBIAL DRUG RESISTANCE
Volume 29, Issue 6, Pages 256-262

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/mdr.2022.0247

Keywords

pan-drug resistance; OXA-48; carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae; combination antibiotic therapy

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This study shares the experience of treating OXA-48-positive PDR-CRKP infection in a pediatric intensive care unit, which was classified as a clinical outbreak. The outbreak was successfully managed with combination antibiotic therapy and strict adherence to infection control measures, resulting in no treatment-related complications and a mortality rate of 9%.
Background: Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) is one of the serious forms of health care-associated infection. Pan-drug resistant (PDR) CRKP infections can cause severe infections. Mortality and treatment costs in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) are high. This study aims to share our experience regarding the treatment of oxacillinase (OXA)-48-positive PDR-CRKP infection in our 20-bed tertiary PICU with isolated rooms and 1 nurse for every 2-3 patients.Methods: Patient demographic characteristics, underlying diseases, previous infections, source of infection PDR-CRKP, treatment modalities, measures used, and outcomes were recorded.Findings: Eleven patients (eight men and three women) were found to have PDR OXA-48-positive CRKP. Because of the simultaneous detection of PDR-CRKP in three patients and the rapid spread of the disease, it was classified as a clinical outbreak, and strict infection control measures were taken. Combination therapy with double carbapenemase (meropenem and imipenem), amikacin, colistin, and tigecycline was used for treatment. The mean duration of treatment and isolation was 15.7 and 65.4 days, respectively. No treatment-related complication was observed, only one patient died, and the mortality rate was 9%.Conclusions: This severe clinical outbreak can be successfully treated with effective treatment with combined antibiotics and strict adherence to infection control measures. ClinicalTrial.gov ID: 28/01/2022 - 1/5

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