Artigo Científico

Antimicrobial resistance and epidemic clustering of late-onset neonatal infections in a Brazilian intensive care unit

Publicado em: Dec 2023

Autores

  • Felipe Teixeira de Mello Freitas
    Hospital Materno Infantil de Brasilia, Brasilia 70203-900, Brazil.
  • Marcela Santos Corrêa da Costa
    Hospital Materno Infantil de Brasilia, Brasilia 70203-900, Brazil.
  • Kaylla Heduarda Rodrigues da Costa
    Escola Superior de Ciências da Saúde, Fundação de Ensino e Pesquisa, Brasilia 70710-907, Brazil.
  • Everton Giovanni Alves
    Laboratório Central de Saúde Pública do Distrito Federal, Brasilia 70.830-010, Brazil.

Resumo

Nosocomial infections in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) tend to cluster and multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens are rising in developing countries. We did a retrospective cohort study of neonates admitted to a NICU in Brazil with late-onset neonatal sepsis (LOS) confirmed by blood culture from October 2012 to December 2016 and from July 2018 to December 2021. We defined a cluster of infection when at least two cases of LOS occurred within two different time intervals: 15 and 30 days with the same pathogen in different patients. A random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) was performed from samples from one of these clusters. A logistic regression model was applied having death as the outcome and the infection with an MDR pathogen as the exposure of interest. There were 987 blood cultures from 754 neonates, 621 (63%) were gram-positive cocci, 264 (30%) were gram-negative rods and 72 (7%) fungi. A third of Enterobacterales were resistant to cefepime and a third of non-fermenting glucose rods were resistant to carbapenems. There were 100 or 104 clusters of infection in the 15- or 30-day interval, respectively. A RAPD analysis from an outbreak of MDR Acinetobacter baumannii showed that all five samples belonged to a single clone. An infection with an MDR pathogen was associated with death (OR 1.82, 95% CI 1.03-3.21). In conclusion, clusters of infections in a Brazilian NICU are a frequent phenomenon as seen elsewhere. They suggest cross-transmission of pathogens with increasing antimicrobial resistance and should prompt intensified surveillance and infection control measures.

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