Influence of Skin Commensals on Therapeutic Outcomes of Surgically Debrided Diabetic Foot Infections—A Large Retrospective Comparative Study

Author:

Uçkay Ilker12,Lebowitz Dan23,Kressmann Benjamin2,Lipsky Benjamin A.24,Gariani Karim25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Infectiology, Balgrist University Hospital, Forchstrasse 340, 8008 Zurich, Switzerland

2. Service of Infectious Diseases, Geneva University Hospitals and Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland

3. Service of Internal Medicine, Clinique des Grangettes, Hirslanden, 1224 Geneva, Switzerland

4. Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

5. Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, Nutrition and Therapeutic Patient Education, Geneva University Hospitals, 1205 Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

In diabetic foot infections (DFI), the clinical virulence of skin commensals are generally presumed to be low. In this single-center study, we divided the wound isolates into two groups: skin commensals (coagulase-negative staphylococci, micrococci, corynebacteria, cutibacteria) and pathogenic pathogens, and followed the patients for ≥ 6 months. In this retrospective study among 1018 DFI episodes (392 [39%] with osteomyelitis), we identified skin commensals as the sole culture isolates (without accompanying pathogenic pathogens) in 54 cases (5%). After treatment (antibiotic therapy [median of 20 days], hyperbaric oxygen in 98 cases [10%]), 251 episodes (25%) were clinical failures. Group comparisons between those growing only skin commensals and controls found no difference in clinical failure (17% vs. 24 %, p = 0.23) or microbiological recurrence (11% vs. 17 %, p = 0.23). The skin commensals were mostly treated with non-beta-lactam oral antibiotics. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, the isolation of only skin commensals was not associated with failure (odds ratio 0.4, 95% confidence interval 0.1–3.8). Clinicians might wish to consider these isolates as potential pathogens when selecting a targeted antibiotic regimen, which may also be based on oral non-beta-lactam antibiotic agents effective against the corresponding skin pathogens.

Funder

The prior Medical Director of Geneva University Hospitals

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,Biochemistry,Microbiology

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