Few bacterial co-infections but frequent empiric antibiotic use in the early phase of hospitalized patients with COVID-19: results from a multicentre retrospective cohort study in The Netherlands ...

Knowledge on bacterial co-infections in COVID-19 is crucial to use antibiotics appropriately. Therefore, we aimed to determine the incidence of bacterial co-infections, antibiotic use and application of antimicrobial stewardship principles in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. We performed a retrospective observational study in four hospitals (1 university, 2 non-university teaching, 1 non-teaching hospital) in the Netherlands from March to May 2020 including consecutive patients with PCR-confirmed COVID-19. Data on first microbiological investigations obtained at the discretion of the physi... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Karami, Zara
Knoop, Bram T.
Dofferhoff, Anton S. M.
Blaauw, Marc J. T.
Janssen, Nico A.
Van Apeldoorn, Marjan
Kerckhoffs, Angèle P. M.
Van De Maat, Josephine S.
Hoogerwerf, Jacobien J.
Oever, Jaap Ten
Dokumenttyp: Journal contribution
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Verlag/Hrsg.: Taylor & Francis
Schlagwörter: Space Science / Medicine / Microbiology / FOS: Biological sciences / Biotechnology / Immunology / FOS: Clinical medicine / 19999 Mathematical Sciences not elsewhere classified / FOS: Mathematics / Science Policy / 110309 Infectious Diseases / FOS: Health sciences / 60506 Virology
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29165701
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.13139338.v1

Knowledge on bacterial co-infections in COVID-19 is crucial to use antibiotics appropriately. Therefore, we aimed to determine the incidence of bacterial co-infections, antibiotic use and application of antimicrobial stewardship principles in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. We performed a retrospective observational study in four hospitals (1 university, 2 non-university teaching, 1 non-teaching hospital) in the Netherlands from March to May 2020 including consecutive patients with PCR-confirmed COVID-19. Data on first microbiological investigations obtained at the discretion of the physician and antibiotic use in the first week of hospital admission were collected. Twelve (1.2%) of the 925 patients included had a documented bacterial co-infection (75.0% pneumonia) within the first week. Microbiological testing was performed in 749 (81%) patients: sputum cultures in 105 (11.4%), blood cultures in 711 (76.9%), pneumococcal urinary antigen testing in 202 (21.8%), and Legionella urinary antigen testing in ...