Department of Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases, University Hospital of Heraklion, 71110, Heraklion, Crete, Greece.
Laboratory of Biostatistics, School of Medicine, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece.
Infection. 2021 Dec;49(6):1149-1161. doi: 10.1007/s15010-021-01663-0. Epub 2021 Jul 14.
Differentiating Acinetobacter baumannii complex (ABC) infection from colonization remains difficult and further complicated in polymicrobial infections.
To assess the frequency of polymicrobial ABC infections and associated mortality. We hypothesized a lower mortality in polymicrobial infections if ABC isolation reflects colonization in some polymicrobial infections.
A systematic review was conducted in PubMed, Scopus and CENTRAL for studies reporting ABC pulmonary and bloodstream infections. The proportion of infections that were polymicrobial and the magnitude of the association between polymicrobial (vs monomicrobial) infection and mortality were estimated with meta-analyses.
Based on 80 studies (9759 infections) from 23 countries, the pooled proportion of polymicrobial infection was 27% (95% CI 22-31%) and was similarly high for bloodstream and pulmonary infections. Polymicrobial infection was variably and insufficiently defined in most (95%) studies. Considerable heterogeneity (I = 95%) was observed that persisted in subgroup analyses and meta-regressions. Based on 17 studies (2675 infections), polymicrobial infection was associated with lower 28-day mortality (OR = 0.75, 95% CI 0.58-0.98, I = 36%). However, polymicrobial infection was not associated with in-hospital mortality (OR = 0.97, 95% CI 0.69-1.35, I = 0%) based on 14 studies (953 infections). The quality of evidence (GRADE) for the association of polymicrobial (vs monomicrobial) infection with mortality was low and at high risk of bias.
Polymicrobial ABC infections are common and may be associated with lower 28-day mortality. Considering the heterogeneity of polymicrobial infections and limitations of the available literature, more research is required to clarify the clinical impact of polymicrobial (vs monomicrobial) ABC infection.
区分鲍曼不动杆菌复合群(ABC)感染与定植仍然很困难,在混合感染时更为复杂。
评估多微生物 ABC 感染的频率和相关死亡率。我们假设,如果 ABC 分离反映了某些多微生物感染中的定植,那么多微生物感染的死亡率会更低。
在 PubMed、Scopus 和 CENTRAL 中进行了系统综述,以检索报告 ABC 肺部和血流感染的研究。使用荟萃分析估计多微生物感染(与单微生物感染相比)的感染比例和死亡率之间的关联程度。
基于来自 23 个国家的 80 项研究(9759 例感染),多微生物感染的总比例为 27%(95%CI 22-31%),血流感染和肺部感染的比例相似。大多数(95%)研究对多微生物感染的定义各不相同且不充分。观察到相当大的异质性(I=95%),且在亚组分析和荟萃回归中仍然存在。基于 17 项研究(2675 例感染),多微生物感染与 28 天死亡率降低相关(OR=0.75,95%CI 0.58-0.98,I=36%)。然而,基于 14 项研究(953 例感染),多微生物感染与住院死亡率无关(OR=0.97,95%CI 0.69-1.35,I=0%)。多微生物(与单微生物)感染与死亡率之间关联的证据质量(GRADE)为低质量,存在高度偏倚风险。
多微生物 ABC 感染很常见,可能与 28 天死亡率降低相关。考虑到多微生物感染的异质性和现有文献的局限性,需要进一步研究以阐明多微生物(与单微生物)ABC 感染的临床影响。