Stenotrophomonas maltophilia bacteremia in children - A 10-year analysis

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Abstract

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is a multidrug-resistant, Gram-negative, and biofilm-forming pathogen. Information is limited concerning S. maltophilia bacteremia in children. Clinical data and microbiological test results collected in a tertiary children’s hospital over a ten-year period were reviewed. Children 0–18 years old who had positive clinical specimen, blood and/or catheter cultures were included. We identified 20 S. maltophilia isolates from 12 pediatric patients with confirmed infections. The median age was 28 months (range: 3.1-187.3). The rate of previous use of antimicrobial therapy was 83 %. The median antibiotic number was 3 (range: 0–7) within 30 days prior to onset of S. maltophilia bacteremia. Catheter related infection was the main infectious source (66.6 %). The mortality rate was 33.3 %. The death of two non-survivors was associated with pneumonia. S. maltophilia should be considered a breakthrough agent for bacteremia in children with underlying disease exposed to broad-spectrum antibiotics during long-term hospitalization.

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Büyükcam, A., Bıçakcıgil, A., Cengiz, A. B., Sancak, B., Ceyhan, M., & Kara, A. (2020). Stenotrophomonas maltophilia bacteremia in children - A 10-year analysis. Archivos Argentinos de Pediatria, 118(3), E317–E323. https://doi.org/10.5546/aap.2020.eng.e317

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