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Published in: Infection 6/2022

Open Access 14-04-2022 | Nosocomial Infection | Original Paper

Characterization of antimicrobial use and co-infections among hospitalized patients with COVID-19: a prospective observational cohort study

Authors: Tilman Lingscheid, Lena J. Lippert, David Hillus, Tassilo Kruis, Charlotte Thibeault, Elisa T. Helbig, Pinkus Tober-Lau, Frieder Pfäfflin, Holger Müller-Redetzky, Martin Witzenrath, Thomas Zoller, Alexander Uhrig, Bastian Opitz, Norbert Suttorp, Tobias S. Kramer, Leif E. Sander, Miriam S. Stegemann, Florian Kurth

Published in: Infection | Issue 6/2022

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Abstract

Purpose

To investigate antimicrobial use and primary and nosocomial infections in hospitalized COVID-19 patients to provide data for guidance of antimicrobial therapy.

Methods

Prospective observational cohort study conducted at Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, including patients hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2-infection between March and November 2020.

Results

309 patients were included, 231 directly admitted and 78 transferred from other centres. Antimicrobial therapy was initiated in 62/231 (26.8%) of directly admitted and in 44/78 (56.4%) of transferred patients. The rate of microbiologically confirmed primary co-infections was 4.8% (11/231). Although elevated in most COVID-19 patients, C-reactive protein and procalcitonin levels were higher in patients with primary co-infections than in those without (median CRP 110 mg/l, IQR 51–222 vs. 36, IQR 11–101, respectively; p < 0.0001). Nosocomial bloodstream and respiratory infections occurred in 47/309 (15.2%) and 91/309 (29.4%) of patients, respectively, and were associated with need for invasive mechanical ventilation (OR 45.6 95%CI 13.7–151.8 and 104.6 95%CI 41.5–263.5, respectively), extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (OR 14.3 95%CI 6.5–31.5 and 16.5 95%CI 6.5–41.6, respectively), and haemodialysis (OR 31.4 95%CI 13.9–71.2 and OR 22.3 95%CI 11.2–44.2, respectively). The event of any nosocomial infection was significantly associated with in-hospital death (33/99 (33.3%) with nosocomial infection vs. 23/210 (10.9%) without, OR 4.1 95%CI 2.2–7.3).

Conclusions

Primary co-infections are rare, yet antimicrobial use was frequent, mostly based on clinical worsening and elevated inflammation markers without clear evidence for co-infection. More reliable diagnostic prospects may help to reduce overtreatment. Rates of nosocomial infections are substantial in severely ill patients on organ support and associated with worse patient outcome.
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Metadata
Title
Characterization of antimicrobial use and co-infections among hospitalized patients with COVID-19: a prospective observational cohort study
Authors
Tilman Lingscheid
Lena J. Lippert
David Hillus
Tassilo Kruis
Charlotte Thibeault
Elisa T. Helbig
Pinkus Tober-Lau
Frieder Pfäfflin
Holger Müller-Redetzky
Martin Witzenrath
Thomas Zoller
Alexander Uhrig
Bastian Opitz
Norbert Suttorp
Tobias S. Kramer
Leif E. Sander
Miriam S. Stegemann
Florian Kurth
Publication date
14-04-2022
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Infection / Issue 6/2022
Print ISSN: 0300-8126
Electronic ISSN: 1439-0973
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s15010-022-01796-w

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