Publications by authors named "Saffioti C"

Background: Dalbavancin, an antimicrobial lipoglycopeptide, is authorized in Europe for treating acute bacterial infections of the skin and skin structures in adults and pediatric patients aged 3 months and older. However, off-label dosing regimens have been proposed for various indications beyond acute bacterial infections of the skin and skin structures. This study presents a novel bioanalytical method using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry to quantify dalbavancin in low-volume plasma samples (50 μL).

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Knowledge of epidemiology is essential for guiding correct antibiotic prescription, reducing bacteremia-associated mortality, and implementing targeted infection control programs. However, only a few studies have reported on the epidemiology of bloodstream infections (BSIs) in pediatrics. We performed a retrospective analysis of all BSIs (excluding those caused by common skin contaminants) diagnosed from 2006 to 2022 in patients younger than 18 years who were treated at an Italian pediatric tertiary care hospital.

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Background: pneumonia (PJP) has high mortality rates in immunocompromised children, even though routine prophylaxis has decreased in incidence. The aim of this case series is to present the radiological and clinical pathway of PJP in a pediatric population.

Description Of Cases: All PJP cases in non-HIV/AIDS patients diagnosed at Istituto Giannina Gaslini Pediatric Hospital in Genoa (Italy) from January 2012 until October 2022 were retrospectively evaluated.

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Article Synopsis
  • Preterm infants are highly vulnerable to infections due to their immature skin and lengthy hospital stays, with MRSA posing a significant threat.
  • Two preterm twins developed cellulitis caused by MRSA shortly after birth, leading to clinical instability and requiring thorough diagnosis and treatment.
  • To prevent MRSA infections in Neonatal Intensive Care Units, strict hygiene practices, patient screening, and careful management of the healthcare environment are crucial.
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We describe an atypical case of Whipple disease exclusively involving the spinal cord in an adolescent receiving immunosuppressive therapy for systemic lupus erythematosus. The diagnosis was particularly difficult since lupus and Whipple disease can present similar clinical features and the patient's prolonged contact with sewage was initially not mentioned. A literature review of the clinical, imaging, diagnostic, and therapeutic challenges of Whipple disease is also performed.

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Background: Guidelines about febrile neutropenia in paediatric patients are not homogeneous; the best empiric treatment of this condition should be driven by local epidemiology. The Weighted-Incidence Syndromic Combination Antibiogram (WISCA) addresses the need for disease-specific local susceptibility evidence that could guide empiric antibiotic prescriptions based on outcome estimates of treatment regimens obtained as a weighted average of pathogen susceptibilities. This study developed a WISCA model to inform empirical antibiotic regimen selection for febrile neutropenia (FN) episodes in onco-haematological paediatric patients treated at two Italian paediatric tertiary centres.

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Article Synopsis
  • Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is a crucial tool for ensuring drug safety and effectiveness by tracking the concentration of medications in blood or plasma.
  • TDM, when paired with real-time dosage adjustments, plays an essential role in managing glycopeptide antimicrobial therapies, which require a good grasp of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics.
  • Liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) is the preferred method for accurately measuring antibiotic levels, providing a detailed analysis for several glycopeptide antibiotics including vancomycin and teicoplanin.
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Bloodstream infections (BSI) from coagulase-negative-staphylococci (CoNS) are among the most frequent healthcare-related infections. Their treatment involves the use of vancomycin, a molecule whose optimal pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) target for efficacy and safety is an area-under-curve/minimum inhibitory concentration (AUC/MIC) ratio ≥ 400 with AUC < 600. BSIs from CoNS in pediatric and neonatal intensive care unit that occurred at the Gaslini Institute over five years were evaluated to investigate the efficacy of vancomycin therapy in terms of achieving the desired PK/PD target and determining whether any variables interfere with the achievement of this target.

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Clostridioides difficile (CD) is one of the most important causes of diarrhea in hospitalized patients, in particular those who undergo an allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (allo-HCT) and who are more at risk of developing a CD infection (CDI) due to frequent hospitalizations, iatrogenic immunosuppression, and prolonged antibiotic cycles. CDI may represent a severe condition in allo-HCT patients, increasing the length of hospitalization, influencing the intestinal microbiome with a bidirectional association with graft-versus-host disease, and leading to unfavorable outcomes, including death. The diagnosis of CDI requires the exclusion of other probable causes of diarrhea in HCT patients and is based on highly sensitive and highly specific tests to distinguish colonization from infection.

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As there is currently no consensus on managing deep neck infections in pediatric populations, we report a case series from a large pediatric hospital. Clinical data of patients discharged from Istituto Gaslini-Children's Hospital from January 2014 to June 2020 with peritonsillar, parapharyngeal, or retropharyngeal abscess diagnoses were collected. A total of 59 patients were identified.

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Objective: This case report describes a patient with mesencephalic MRI signal abnormality and diplopia, possibly associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection.

Methods: We describe a boy with binocular diplopia and nystagmus. The pattern of serology positivity and negative direct research of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in our patient allowed us to consider novel coronavirus as the trigger of possible immune-mediated phenomena against the central nervous system.

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Antibiotic resistance is an increasing problem, especially in children with urinary tract infections. Rates of drug-specific resistant pathogens were reported, and an easy prediction model to guide the clinical decision-making process for antibiotic treatment was proposed. Data on microbiological isolation from urinoculture, between January 2007−December 2018 at Istituto Gaslini, Italy, in patients aged <19 years were extracted.

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Unlabelled: Bloodstream infections play an important role in neonatal morbidity and mortality. In this study, we retrospectively analyzed etiology and antibiotic resistance profiles of bacteria isolated from blood or Cerebro Spinal Fluid (CSF) cultures to evaluate the appropriateness of initial empirical therapy of neonatal sepsis.

Methods: microbiological data from patients admitted to Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), from January 2005 to October 2018, were anonymously extracted from the Laboratory of Microbiology database.

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Colistin is a last-resort agent for the treatment of infections due to Gram-negative bacteria with difficult-to-treat resistance. The primary objective of this post hoc analysis of a cross-sectional study conducted in 22 Italian hospitals was to assess factors associated with inadequate intravenous colistin dosage. Overall, 187 patients receiving intravenous colistin were included in the analyses.

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Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the causative agent of pandemic coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID 19) Protection from virus exposure in children's hospital is a pivotal aspect of SARS-COV-2 pandemic control. Healthcare workers (HCW) could play an important role in viral infection in-hospital spread. Infection control measures were thus implemented to protect fragile patients and healthcare workers.

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Rotavirus is a major cause of acute gastroenteritis in children under 5 years of age, with severe illness occurring in 30-40% of cases. In Italian region of Liguria, vaccination with a two-dose human attenuated vaccine was introduced in 2013. We conducted a retrospective study to assess the impact of rotavirus vaccine on hospitalizations for rotavirus-related gastroenteritis (RVGE) at the IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini.

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is a multidrug-resistant, difficult-to-eradicate pathogen that can colonize patients and health-care environments and cause severe infections and nosocomial outbreaks, especially in intensive care units. We observed an extremely low-birth-weight (800 g), preterm neonate born from vaginal delivery from a colonized mother, who was colonized by within a few hours after birth. We could not discriminate whether the colonization route was the birth canal or the intensive care unit environment.

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Antibiotic susceptibility of was retrospectively assessed in 1833 strains isolated from skin lesions observed in an Italian tertiary care hospital. Methicillin resistance was more frequent in outpatients than in inpatients (18% vs. 14%,  = 0.

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Resistant pathogens have become a major healthcare problem in children with cancer, causing different kinds of infections such as the bloodstream ones, most common, and most frequently described and the urinary tract ones, of which less data are available. We analyzed and compared the proportions, and the trends of resistance in pathogens isolated from blood and urines in children with cancer followed in IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genova, Italy, from January 2007 to December 2018. Overall, 345 strains detected in urines and 282 in bloodstream infections were analyzed.

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Introduction: To evaluate the aetiology of neonatal invasive diseases (positive cultures from blood or cerebrospinal fluid, CSF) due to bacteria other than coagulase-negative staphylococci in a large tertiary care centre and compare with results of surveillance cultures.

Methods: Retrospective analysis of microbiological data of children admitted in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of a large tertiary care centre from 2005 to 2018.

Results: 230 bacterial strains, 223 from blood and 7 from CSF, respectively, were detected as cause of invasive infections, while 152 were detected in surveillance cultures.

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In this report it is shown that intravenous formulation of isavuconazole could be administered 5/7 days a week in patients who can not swallow capsules, once the steady state has been stably reached and maintained, thanks to its very long half-life. In this case TDM should be highly recommended.

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Background: The accurate measurement of plasma levels of antibiotics is crucial for the individualization of antimicrobial therapies based on PK/PD strategies. In this paper we describe a new rapid and simple LC-MS/MS platform for quantifying 14 antibiotics (amikacin, amoxicillin, ceftazidime, ciprofloxacin, colistin, daptomycin, gentamicin, linezolid, meropenem, piperacillin, teicoplanin, tigecycline, tobramycin and vancomycin) and a beta-lactamase inhibitor (tazobactam) starting from 50 μL plasma samples.

Methods: Analyses were performed on a Thermo Scientific™ Ultimate™ 3000 LC system (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Milan, Italy) coupled to a Thermo Scientific™ TSQ Quantiva™ Triple Quadrupole mass spectrometer.

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Introduction: The avoidable mortality (ME)represents the share of deaths that occurs at an early age (0-74 aa) for causes that cannot be faced by means of public health or health care measures. The work develops a strategic intervention plan aimed at the reduction of ME by identifying local priority actions based on epidemiologic and social-health data.

Methods: a working group among the Department of Prevention, Health Information Systems and Health District was set up.

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