Apiwattankul Nopporn, Flynn Patricia M, Hayden Randall T, Adderson Elisabeth E
Departments of Infectious Diseases.
Departments of Infectious Diseases Department of Pediatrics, University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center, Memphis.
J Pediatric Infect Dis Soc. 2015 Jun;4(2):104-13. doi: 10.1093/jpids/piu038. Epub 2014 May 7.
Rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM) infections in pediatric oncology patients have not been completely characterized.
We reviewed medical records of oncology patients at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (St. Jude) from 1990 to 2010 with RGM infections and summarized the results of previously published cases.
Twenty-five St. Jude patients had 27 episodes of infection. Approximately half of the cases occurred in patients with hematological malignancies and in males; infections were more common in white patients. Most patients were not neutropenic or lymphopenic. The most common causative species were Mycobacterium chelonae, Mycobacterium abscessus, and Mycobacterium fortuitum. Most isolates were susceptible to amikacin and clarithromycin; all were susceptible to at least 1 of these. Treatment regimens varied considerably, particularly with respect to the duration of antimicrobial chemotherapy. Two St. Jude patients died; both had pulmonary infections. The literature search identified an additional 58 cases of infection. Localized catheter-associated infections were more common than bloodstream infections in the current series than in previous reports, and outbreaks were not recognized. Otherwise, the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients were similar.
Localized catheter-associated infections were most common in this largest reported single center experience reported to date. Pulmonary infection is uncommon in children but, as in adults, has a high mortality rate. Relatively short-term antimicrobial treatment and surgical debridement of infected tissue, if present, may be as effective for catheter-associated infections as prolonged antimicrobial use and may reduce adverse drug effects in these patients, who are vulnerable to drug-drug interactions and toxicity.
儿科肿瘤患者中快速生长分枝杆菌(RGM)感染尚未得到全面描述。
我们回顾了1990年至2010年圣裘德儿童研究医院(圣裘德)肿瘤患者发生RGM感染的病历,并总结了先前发表病例的结果。
25例圣裘德患者发生了27次感染发作。约一半病例发生于血液系统恶性肿瘤患者及男性;感染在白人患者中更常见。大多数患者不存在中性粒细胞减少或淋巴细胞减少。最常见的致病菌种为龟分枝杆菌、脓肿分枝杆菌和偶然分枝杆菌。大多数分离株对阿米卡星和克拉霉素敏感;所有分离株至少对其中一种敏感。治疗方案差异很大,尤其是在抗微生物化疗疗程方面。2例圣裘德患者死亡;均为肺部感染。文献检索又发现了58例感染病例。在本系列中,局部导管相关感染比血流感染更常见,与先前报告相比,未发现暴发情况。此外,患者的人口统计学和临床特征相似。
在迄今报告的最大规模单中心经验中,局部导管相关感染最为常见。肺部感染在儿童中不常见,但与成人一样,死亡率很高。对于导管相关感染,相对短期的抗微生物治疗以及对感染组织(若存在)进行手术清创可能与长期使用抗微生物药物一样有效,并且可能减少这些易发生药物相互作用和毒性的患者的药物不良反应。