Publications by authors named "Cheng-Len Sy"

Background: Nemonoxacin is a new quinolone with an antibacterial efficacy against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Certain sequence types (STs) have been emerging in Taiwan, including fluoroquinolone-resistant ST8/USA300. It's an urgent need to determine nemonoxacin susceptibility against ST8/USA300 and other emerging lineages, if any.

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Background: Inappropriate antimicrobial use is a crucial determinant of mortality in hospitalized patients with bloodstream infections. Current literature reporting on the impact of clinical decision support systems on optimizing antimicrobial prescription and reducing the time to appropriate antimicrobial therapy is limited.

Methods: Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital implemented a hospital-wide, knowledge-based, active-delivery clinical decision support system, named RAPID (Real-time Alert for antimicrobial Prescription from virtual Infectious Diseases experts), to detect whether there was an antimicrobial agent-pathogen mismatch when a blood culture result was positive.

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Antimicrobial drug resistance is one of the major threats to global health. It has made common infections increasingly difficult or impossible to treat, and leads to higher medical costs, prolonged hospital stays and increased mortality. Infection rates due to multidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO) are increasing globally.

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Background: Dengue virus (DENV) infection may be associated with increased risks of major adverse cardiovascular effect (MACE), but a large-scale study evaluating the association between DENV infection and MACEs is still lacking.

Methods And Findings: All laboratory confirmed dengue cases in Taiwan during 2009 and 2015 were included by CDC notifiable database. The self-controlled case-series design was used to evaluate the association between DENV infection and MACE (including acute myocardial infarction [AMI], heart failure and stroke).

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Background: Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) is a common opportunistic infection with high mortality in individuals with decreased immunity. Pulmonary coinfections with PCP are associated with poor prognosis. The study aims to identify radiological predictors for pulmonary coinfections in patients with PCP and risk factors for mortality.

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By the request of the Minister of Health and Welfare, NHRI Biobank was assigned to establish a COVID-19 biobank in early Feb, 2020 to collect COVID-19 patients' blood samples for Taiwan researchers and industries in an emergent way. It was set up in less than 3 weeks and quickly opened for application. By August 5, 2020, this COVID-19 biobank has collected 165 blood samples of 110 patients from more than 10 hospitals across north, middle and south part of Taiwan, including both COVID-19 (+) and (-) pneumonia patients.

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Nontuberculous mycobacterial infections and colonization are becoming more prevalent worldwide. Mycobacterium abscessus complex (MABC) is one of the predominant pathogens capable of a wide spectrum of infections, with 50% of infections involving the lungs. The decision to commence treatment is determined according to the severity of the disease, risk of progressive disease, presence of comorbidities, and goals of treatment.

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Background: The use of fixed combination antiretroviral therapy with a low genetic barrier for the treatment of patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) may affect the local HIV transmitted drug resistance (TDR) pattern. The present study aimed to investigate changes in the prevalence of HIV TDR following the implementation of a fixed regimen of HIV treatment in Taiwan in 2012.

Methods: TDR was measured in antiretroviral treatment-naïve HIV-1-infected individuals who participated in voluntary counseling and testing between 2007 and 2015 in southern Taiwan.

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The use of antiretroviral therapy has reduced rates of mortality and morbidity in patients with human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome(HIV/AIDS). However, transmission of drug-resistant strains poses a challenge to control the spread of HIV-1. Primary resistance to integrase strand-transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) is rare despite their increased use.

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Bacteremia caused by MRSA with reduced vancomycin susceptibility (MRSA-RVS) frequently resulted in treatment failure and mortality. The relation of bacterial factors and unfavorable outcomes remains controversial. We retrospectively reviewed clinical data of patients with bacteremia caused by MRSA with vancomycin MIC = 2 mg/L from 2009 to 2012.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined the prevalence and risk factors of drug resistance in HIV patients in Taiwan who experienced treatment failure between 2009 and 2014.
  • It found that 75.5% of patients exhibited resistance to antiretroviral drugs, with the highest resistance rates in NRTIs (58.6%) and NNRTIs (61.4%).
  • Key risk factors for drug resistance included being aged 35 or younger, starting treatment with NNRTI-based regimens, and continuing NNRTI regimens at the time of treatment failure.
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Background: Bile esculin azide with vancomycin (BEAV) medium is a sensitive, but slightly less specific method for vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) screening. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) is a rapid method for identification of clinical pathogens. This study aimed to assess the performance of a novel combination screening test for VRE, using BEAV broth combined with MALDI-TOF MS.

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Background: Dengue fever is an important arboviral disease. The clinical manifestations vary from a mild non-specific febrile syndrome to severe life-threatening illness. The virus can usually be detected in the blood during the early stages of the disease.

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Background: Evaluation and feedback is a core hand hygiene (HH) improvement strategy. The covert observation method avoids observation bias inherent to the overt method. The aim of the study was to observe HH compliance by a novel covert method in a real-world setting.

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Background: Hand hygiene (HH) is considered to be the most simple, rapid, and economic way to prevent health care-associated infection (HAI). However, poor HH compliance has been repeatedly reported. Our objective was to evaluate the impact of implementing the updated World Health Organization (WHO) multimodal HH guidelines on HH compliance and HAI in a tertiary hospital in Taiwan.

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Modified disk diffusion (MDD) and checkerboard tests were employed to assess the synergy of combinations of vancomycin and β-lactam antibiotics for 59 clinical isolates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Mu50 (ATCC 700699). Bacterial inocula equivalent to 0.5 and 2.

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Background: Predicting the risk of tuberculosis (TB) in people living with HIV (PLHIV) using a single test is currently not possible. We aimed to develop and validate a clinical algorithm, using baseline CD4 cell counts, HIV viral load (pVL), and interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA), to identify PLHIV who are at high risk for incident active TB in low-to-moderate TB burden settings where highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is routinely provided.

Materials And Methods: A prospective, 5-year, cohort study of adult PLHIV was conducted from 2006 to 2012 in two hospitals in Taiwan.

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Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has emerged as a major nosocomial pathogen that is widespread in both health-care facilities and in the community at large, as a result of direct host-to-host transmission. Several virulence factors are associated with pathogen transmission to naive hosts. Immunodominant surface antigen B (IsaB) is a virulence factor that helps Staphylococcus aureus to evade the host defense system.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) prevalence and risk factors among HIV-infected and uninfected individuals, particularly intravenous drug users (IDUs), in Taiwan where TB is moderately common and the BCG vaccine is widely used.
  • 233 patients were enrolled, revealing LTBI prevalence rates of 22.8% (TST), 15.9% (QFT-G), and 20.6% (QFT-GIT), with HIV-infected individuals showing significantly lower positivity rates on tests.
  • Key risk factors for higher IGRA positivity included increasing age and being an IDU, while there was poor agreement between results from different tests in HIV-infected patients, emphasizing the complexity of diagnosing LTBI
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the frequency and risk factors of liver toxicity related to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infected patients in Taiwan, noting a higher prevalence of co-infection compared to Western countries.
  • - A cohort of 228 patients was examined for transaminase elevation as a measure of liver toxicity, finding only a 1.28% occurrence of high-grade events, with overall transaminase elevation at 16% and specific risk factors identified.
  • - Results indicate that starting HAART during the study and having a CD4 count below 350 cells/mm³ were predictive factors for liver toxicity; however, HAART was beneficial in improving liver fibrosis progression
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  • HIV-transmitted drug resistance (TDR) is on the rise, and a study in Southern Taiwan examined TDR patterns and the link between sexual behavior and HIV transmission.
  • The study involved 161 treatment-naïve HIV patients, mainly men who have sex with men, having a TDR rate of 10.6%.
  • A history of sexually transmitted diseases significantly increases the risk, with those affected being 7.8 times more likely to contract resistant HIV strains.
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We report the case of an 81-year-old man diagnosed with liver cirrhosis complicated by spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and septic shock. Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex was isolated from the ascites, sputum, and blood culture 1 month after the patient died. Clinicians should be aware of the unusual diagnosis of sepsis tuberculosa gravissima presenting with tuberculous peritonitis, which is easily misdiagnosed as spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and Gram-negative bacillus sepsis in patients with cirrhosis.

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This case report describes a methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolated repeatedly from the blood of a patient with community-acquired endocarditis who developed a four-fold increase in the minimal inhibitory concentration of vancomycin and daptomycin 7 months after his last exposure to glycopeptide antibiotics. This is contrary to the expected situation in which antimicrobial resistance tends to decrease after a patient is no longer exposed to vancomycin.

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Article Synopsis
  • Healthcare workers (HCWs) in Taiwan were studied to determine the prevalence of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) using two tests: QuantiFERON-TB Gold (QFT-G) and the tuberculin skin test (TST), amidst high BCG vaccination rates.
  • The study involved 193 HCWs, revealing a high LTBI prevalence of 88.8% via TST, but only 14.5% using QFT-G, with poor agreement between the two tests.
  • Analysis indicated that age (35 years or older) was the only significant risk factor linked to positive QFT-G results, suggesting that TB exposure might occur in both hospital and community settings, regardless of prior exposure history.
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Background: The epidemiology and impact of hepatitis δ virus (HDV) on hepatic outcomes and virological and immunological responses to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) patients coinfected with hepatitis B virus (HBV) in northern Taiwan have been reported. However, the epidemiology and impact of HDV infection in HIV-HBV coinfection patients in southern Taiwan remains uncertain.

Methods: In this cohort study, a total of 64 HIV patients coinfected with HBV were identified between January 1, 2009 and May 30, 2012.

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