Dickstein Yaakov, Yahav Dafna, Tiseo Giusy, Mussini Cristina, Franceschini Erica, Santoro Antonella, Rahav Galia, Elinav Hila, Potruch Assaf, Nutman Amir, Paul Mical, Falcone Marco
Infectious Diseases Unit, Rambam Health Care Campus, Haifa, Israel.
Infectious Diseases Unit, Sheba Medical Center, Derech Sheba 2, Ramat Gan, 52621, Israel.
Infection. 2025 Jun 16. doi: 10.1007/s15010-025-02584-y.
Previous studies analyzing differences in mortality associated with carbapenemase type in patients with a variety of infections caused by carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales (CPE) have produced conflicting results.
We performed a multinational multicenter retrospective cohort study. Adult patients with blood-stream infections (BSI) caused by CPE between 2015 and 2020 were included. The primary outcome was 14-day mortality; 28-day mortality and microbiological failure were secondary outcomes. Clinical and microbiological data were collected and analyzed using conditional logistic regression.
A total of 360 patients were identified of whom 226 had infections caused by KPC-producing isolates, 109 by NDM-producing isolates and 25 by other carbapenemases. Definitive therapy was colistin-based in 35.1% of patients, ceftazidime/avibactam ± aztreonam (CAZ/AVI ± A) in 28.2% and other in 23.4%. Overall 14-day mortality was 28.1%; carbapenemase type was unassociated with mortality in univariate or multivariate analyses. Antimicrobial therapy was significantly associated with 14-day mortality: patients treated with CAZ/AVI ± A had an adjusted hazard ratio of 0.172 (95% confidence interval 0.063-0.473) for death as compared to patients treated with colistin-based therapy. At 28 days, overall mortality was 35.3%; no association was observed between carbapenemase type and 28-day mortality or microbiological failure.
After controlling for antimicrobial therapy, we did not find evidence of an association between carbapenemase type and mortality. Ceftazidime/avibactam was associated with a greater than 80% reduction in mortality as compared with colistin.