학술논문

Clinical Outcomes of Patients With Nontyphoidal Salmonella Infections by Isolate Resistance—Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, 10 US Sites, 2004–2018.
Document Type
Article
Source
Clinical Infectious Diseases. 3/15/2024, Vol. 78 Issue 3, p535-543. 9p.
Subject
*ANTIBIOTICS
*PUBLIC health surveillance
*DEATH
*MICROBIAL virulence
*AZITHROMYCIN
*DRUG resistance in microorganisms
*HOSPITAL care
*TRAVEL
*SEROTYPES
*BLOODBORNE infections
*EVALUATION of medical care
*AGE distribution
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*RACE
*ODDS ratio
*PATHOGENIC microorganisms
*EPIDEMICS
*CO-trimoxazole
*FOOD poisoning
*LENGTH of stay in hospitals
*PUBLIC health
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*NATURAL immunity
*DATA analysis software
*TREATMENT failure
*SALMONELLA diseases
*CEFTRIAXONE
Language
ISSN
1058-4838
Abstract
Background Nontyphoidal Salmonella causes an estimated 1.35 million US infections annually. Antimicrobial-resistant strains are a serious public health threat. We examined the association between resistance and the clinical outcomes of hospitalization, length-of-stay ≥3 days, and death. Methods We linked epidemiologic data from the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network with antimicrobial resistance data from the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) for nontyphoidal Salmonella infections from 2004 to 2018. We defined any resistance as resistance to ≥1 antimicrobial and clinical resistance as resistance to ampicillin, azithromycin, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (for the subset of isolates tested for all 5 agents). We compared outcomes before and after adjusting for age, state, race/ethnicity, international travel, outbreak association, and isolate serotype and source. Results Twenty percent of isolates (1105/5549) had any resistance, and 16% (469/2969) had clinical resistance. Persons whose isolates had any resistance were more likely to be hospitalized (31% vs 28%, P =.01) or have length-of-stay ≥3 days (20% vs 16%, P =.01). Deaths were rare but more common among those with any than no resistance (1.0% vs 0.4%, P =.01). Outcomes for patients whose isolates had clinical resistance did not differ significantly from those with no resistance. After adjustment, any resistance (adjusted odds ratio 1.23, 95% confidence interval 1.04–1.46) remained significantly associated with hospitalization. Conclusions We observed a significant association between nontyphoidal Salmonella infections caused by resistant pathogens and likelihood of hospitalization. Clinical resistance was not associated with poorer outcomes, suggesting that factors other than treatment failure (eg, strain virulence, strain source, host factors) may be important. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]