4.4 Article

Hospital-Acquired Bloodstream Infections in Patients Hospitalized With Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Infection (Coronavirus Disease 2019): Association With Immunosuppressive Therapies

Journal

OPEN FORUM INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 8, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofab339

Keywords

bacteremia; COVID-19; fungemia; immunosuppressive therapy; SARS-CoV-2

Funding

  1. Jane and Dayton Brown Research Fund

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This study retrospectively assessed the association between immunosuppressive therapies and bloodstream infections in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, finding that the combination of corticosteroid-tocilizumab therapy was significantly associated with BSIs. Further studies are needed to establish causation.
Background Immunosuppressive therapies proposed for Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) management may predispose to secondary infections. We evaluated the association of immunosuppressive therapies with bloodstream-infections (BSIs) in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. Methods This was an institutional review board-approved retrospective, multicenter, cohort study of adults hospitalized with COVID-19 over a 5-month period. We obtained clinical, microbiologic and laboratory data from electronic medical records. Propensity-score-matching helped create balanced exposure groups. Demographic characteristics were compared across outcome groups (BSI/no BSI) using two-sample t-test and Chi-Square test for continuous and categorical variables respectively, while immunosuppressive therapy use was compared using McNemar's test. Conditional logistic regression helped assess the association between immunosuppressive therapies and BSIs. Results 13,007 patients were originally included, with propensity-score-matching producing a sample of 6,520 patients. 3.74% and 3.97% were diagnosed with clinically significant BSIs in the original and propensity-score-matched populations respectively. COVID-19 patients with BSIs had significantly longer hospitalizations, higher intensive care unit admission and mortality rates compared to those without BSIs. On univariable analysis, combinations of corticosteroids/anakinra [odds-ratio (OR) 2.00, 95% confidence intervals (C.I.) 1.05-3.80, P value.0342] and corticosteroids/tocilizumab [OR 2.13, 95% C.I. 1.16-3.94, P value .0155] were significantly associated with BSIs. On multivariable analysis (adjusting for confounders), combination corticosteroids/tocilizumab were significantly associated with any BSI [OR 1.97, 95% C.I. 1.04-3.73, P value.0386] and with bacterial BSIs [OR 2.13, 95% C.I. 1.12-4.05, p-value 0.0217]. Conclusions Combination immunosuppressive therapies were significantly associated with BSI occurrence in COVID-19 patients; their use warrants increased BSI surveillance. Further studies are needed to establish their causative role. Immunosuppressive therapies predispose to secondary infections. We retrospectively evaluated the association of immunosuppressive therapies with bloodstream infection (BSI) incidence in hospitalized adults with COVID-19, using propensity score matching and multivariable logistic regression. Combination corticosteroid-tocilizumab therapy was significantly associated with BSIs.

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