The risk factors, therapy and outcome of ten cases of fungemia due to Candida krusei, appearing during the last 10 years in a single national cancer institution, are analyzed. Univariate analyses did not find any specific risk factors in comparison to 51 Candida albicans fungemias appearing at the same institution and with a similar antibiotic policy. Association with prior fluconazole prophylaxis was not confirmed because only one case appeared in a patient previously treated with fluconazole.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree cases of Clavispora lusitaniae invasive fungal infections are reported. All three infections appeared in cancer patients presented with fungaemia, one additionally with meningitis. Two of them were breakthrough -- they developed during therapy with conventional amphotericin B with a dose of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe paper presents an analysis of fungemia cases which were caused by C. parapsilosis in a cancer center within 10 years, with the aim to compare risk factors and the outcome with fungemias caused by C. albicans and other non-albicans Candida spp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to determine if patients with high vancomycin (VAN) serum levels experience more toxicity than underdosed patients with lower (VAN) levels, and whether low VAN serum levels cause therapeutic failures in patients with gram-positive bacteremia. In 198 cancer patients trough and peak serum levels of VAN were measured. Acute toxicity (Red Man syndrome) appeared in 3 patients (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom 1989 until 1996, during the last 8 years, the proportion of Candida (C.) krusei, and other non-albicans Candida spp. isolated from surveillance cultures and from sterile body sites, was analyzed among 13,758 admissions in a National Cancer Institute.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRelationships between aetiology, various risk factors (such as neutropenia, catheter insertion, endoscopy, therapy with corticosteroids, therapeutic use of antimicrobials, antibiotic prophylaxis, source of infection), symptomatology and outcome were studied in 553 monomicrobial bacteraemic episodes in cancer patients observed within 7 years at the National Cancer Institute of the Slovak Republic. The ratio of gram-positive to gram-negative bacteraemia was 1:1 (43.5% vs 43.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEtiology, risk factors, outcome and complications of bacteremia in 276 patients with solid tumors were analyzed. A group of 78 patients with solid tumors and surgical therapy only was compared with 172 patients with solid tumors who were treated with chemotherapy only. The most frequently observed risk factors of bacteremia in patients after surgery was urinary catheter insertion, wound as source of bacteremia, age > 60, staphylococci, enterococci and Enterobacteriaceae as etiologic agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFifty one episodes of bacteremia due to Enterobacter spp. appearing within 7 years among 12 301 admissions in a single cancer institution were studied for risk factors, clinical presentation and outcome. Fifteen episodes were due to Enterobacter aerogenes, 23 due to E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe resistance pattern of 2816 isolates from 17631 blood cultures and the etiology of isolates causing bacteremia and fungemia among 14591 admissions were investigated in an 80-bed single cancer institute during seven years (1990-1996) under the same empiric therapeutic antibiotic policy but with different prophylactic strategies. No change was found in the proportion of Gram-positive versus Gram-negative bacteria isolated from bacteremias (70% vs. 30%) during the past seven years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF60 patients with 60 viridans streptococcal bacteraemic episodes (42 due to penicillin-sensitive and 18 due to penicillin-resistant viridans streptococci) were analysed in a population of 12,185 admissions and 1,380 bacteraemic episodes during a 7-year period in a National Cancer Institute. The incidence of viridans streptococci among bacteraemias decreased from 11.5% in 1989 to 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRisk factors, etiology, symptomatology and outcome of bacteremia in 276 patients with solid tumors were evaluated. A group of 78 patients with solid tumors and surgical therapy was compared with 172 patients with solid tumors but treated solely by chemotherapy. The most frequently observed risk factors of bacteremia in patients after surgery were the vascular and urinary catheter insertions, wound as source of bacteremia, staphylococci, enterococci and Enterobacteriaceae as etiologic agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVancomycine serum levels were measured in 198 cancer patients with documented grampositive bacteremia and twenty two failed. Failures were analyzed for risk factors of therapy failure. Only 8 of 22 showed low serum peak or through vancomycin levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors studied a relationship between particular bacterial or fungal organisms isolated from blood cultures and type of malignancy and antineoplastic drugs in 237 cancer patients. Sixty four had acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), 43 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and 140 solid tumors (ST). All patients had at least one positive blood cultures for one or more microorganism drawn during 1-10 days after cytotoxic chemotherapy, viridans streptococcal bacteremia was more frequently observed in patients with AML (12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNinety nine patients with 101 bacteraemic episodes due to Ps. aeruginosa (PA) within 6 years were divided into two groups according to their resistance to imipenem-91 due to imipenem sensitive (ISPA) and 10 due to resistant (IRPA). Risk factors, the clinical course and the outcome were evaluated and compared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA total of 134 episodes of staphylococcal bacteremia (SBE) appearing among 9987 admissions, and 979 episodes of bacteremia in cancer patients within 5 years, were analyzed for risk factors, clinical course and outcome; 64 were monomicrobial and 70 polymicrobial. The most frequent risk factors were acute leukemia, catheter insertion, long-lasting neutropenia, and prior prophylaxis with quinolones. There was no significant difference between polymicrobial and monomicrobial SBE in risk factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo hundred and fourteen episodes of polymicrobial bacteremia in 182 cancer patients in a period of 6 years in a 360-bed National Cancer Institute were analyzed for etiology, risk factors and outcome. Variables were compared with 187 episodes of monomicrobial bacteremias in 147 cancer patients to find statistical significance among risk factors, etiology and outcome. Urinary catheters and breakthrough bacteremia were the only risk factors associated with polymicrobial in comparison to monomicrobial bacteremia (P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a randomized trial, we compared the efficacy and toxicity of azithromycin and ceftibuten once daily in the initial (empiric) therapy of proven or suspected community-acquired respiratory tract infections (CARTI) in 163 pediatric patients: 95.5% of those treated with azithromycin and 83.6% of those treated with ceftibuten were cured or improved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF