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Clinical and Microbiological Determinants of Outcome in Staphylococcus aureus Bacteraemia.

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 16:03 authored by James Price, Gillian Baker, Ian Heath, Karen Walker-Bone, Marc Cubbon, Sally Curtis, Mark C Enright, Jodi Lindsay, John Paul, Martin LlewelynMartin Llewelyn
Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia (SAB) is commonly complicated by metastatic infection or relapse after treatment. Objectives. The study aim was to determine the role of bacterial, host, and management factors in development of complicated SAB. Methods. A prospectively-conducted observational study gathered data on predisposition, management and outcome of 100 consecutive SAB cases. Antibiotic susceptibilities and genetic lineage of bacterial isolates were determined. Further clinical and microbiological data were gathered on two retrospective series from 1999-2000 (n = 57) and 2004 (n = 116). Results. In the prospective cases, 27% met our definition of complicated disease. Expressed as RR and 95% CI, complicated disease was associated with diabetes (1.58, 1.00-2.48), injecting-drug use (5.48, 0.88-33.49), community-onset of symptoms (1.4, 1.02-1.92), and symptom duration >/=48 hours prior to starting effective antibiotic therapy (2.10, 1.22-3.61). Uncomplicated disease was associated with the presence of a central line (0.69, 0.55-0.88) and prompt removal of a primary focus (0.71, 0.57-0.90). Neither methicillin resistance nor genetic lineage was associated with complicated disease, but methicillin resistance was associated with higher mortality. Conclusions. This study demonstrates that clinical rather than microbial factors are the major determinants of SAB outcome and underscores the importance of early treatment.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

International Journal of Microbiology

ISSN

1687-9198

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Volume

2010

Page range

654858

Department affiliated with

  • Clinical and Experimental Medicine Publications

Notes

PubMed ID: 20300477 Published Electronically: 16 Mar 2010 NLM Unique ID: 101516125

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2011-08-24

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