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Effect of carbapenem resistance on outcomes of bloodstream infection caused by Enterobacteriaceae in low-income and middle-income countries (PANORAMA): a multinational prospective cohort study

  • Andrew J. Stewardson
  • , Kalisvar Marimuthu
  • , Sharmila Sengupta
  • , Arthur Allignol
  • , Maisra El-Bouseary
  • , Maria J. Carvalho
  • , Brekhna Hassan
  • , Monica A. Delgado-Ramirez
  • , Anita Arora
  • , Ruchika Bagga
  • , Alex K. Owusu-Ofori
  • , Joseph O. Ovosi
  • , Shamsudin Aliyu
  • , Hala Saad
  • , Souha S. Kanj
  • , Basudha Khanal
  • , Balkrishna Bhattarai
  • , Samir K. Saha
  • , Jamal Uddin
  • , Purabi Barman
  • Latika Sharma, Tarek El-Banna, Rabaab Zahra, Mansab Ali Saleemi, Amarjeet Kaur, Kenneth Iregbu, Nkolika SC Uwaezuoke, Pierre Abi Hanna, Rita Feghali, Ana L. Correa, Maria I. Munera, Thi Anh Thu Le, Thi Thanh Nga Tran, Chimanjita Phukan, Chiranjita Phukan, Sandra L. Valderrama-Beltrán, Carlos Alvarez-Moreno, Timothy R. Walsh, Stephan Harbarth
  • University of Geneva
  • Alfred Health
  • Harvard University
  • Tan Tock Seng Hospital
  • National Centre for Infectious Diseases
  • National University of Singapore
  • The Medicity Hospital
  • Universität Ulm
  • Tanta University
  • Cardiff University
  • Hospital General "Dr. Manuel Gea González"
  • Fortis Healthcare Limited
  • Fortis Memorial Research Institute
  • Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology
  • Kaduna State University
  • Ahmadu Bello University
  • American University of Beirut
  • B P Koirala Institute of Health Sciences
  • Dhaka Shishu Hospital
  • Child Health Research Foundation
  • BLK Super Specialty Hospital
  • Quaid-I-Azam University
  • National Hospital Abuja
  • Rafik Hariri University Hospital
  • Hospital Pablo Tobon Uribe
  • Cho Ray Hospital
  • Gauhati Medical College and Hospital
  • Hospital Universitario San Ignacio
  • Universidad Nacional de Colombia

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

170 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs)are under-represented in reports on the burden of antimicrobial resistance. We aimed to quantify the clinical effect of carbapenem resistance on mortality and length of hospital stay among inpatients in LMICs with a bloodstream infection due to Enterobacteriaceae. Methods: The PANORAMA study was a multinational prospective cohort study at tertiary hospitals in Bangladesh, Colombia, Egypt, Ghana, India, Lebanon, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Vietnam, recruiting consecutively diagnosed patients with carbapenem-susceptible Enterobacteriaceae (CSE)and carbapenem-resistant Entero-bacteriaceae (CRE)bloodstream infections. We excluded patients who had previously been enrolled in the study and those not treated with curative intent at the time of bloodstream infection onset. There were no age restrictions. Central laboratories in India and the UK did confirmatory testing and molecular characterisation, including strain typing. We applied proportional subdistribution hazard models with inverse probability weighting to estimate the effect of carbapenem resistance on probability of discharge alive and in-hospital death, and multistate modelling for excess length of stay in hospital. All patients were included in the analysis. Findings: Between Aug 1, 2014, and June 30, 2015, we recruited 297 patients from 16 sites in ten countries: 174 with CSE bloodstream infection and 123 with CRE bloodstream infection. Median age was 46 years (IQR 15–61). Crude mortality was 20% (35 of 174 patients)for patients with CSE bloodstream infection and 35% (43 of 123 patients)for patients with CRE bloodstream infection. Carbapenem resistance was associated with an increased length of hospital stay (3·7 days, 95% CI 0·3–6·9), increased probability of in-hospital mortality (adjusted subdistribution hazard ratio 1·75, 95% CI 1·04–2·94), and decreased probability of discharge alive (0·61, 0·45–0·83). Multilocus sequence typing showed various clades, with marginal overlap between strains in the CRE and CSE clades. Interpretation: Carbapenem resistance is associated with increased length of hospital stay and mortality in patients with bloodstream infections in LMICs. These data will inform global estimates of the burden of antimicrobial resistance and reinforce the need for better strategies to prevent, diagnose, and treat CRE infections in LMICs. Funding: bioMérieux.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)601-610
Number of pages10
JournalThe Lancet Infectious Diseases
Volume19
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2019
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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