Epidemiology of Bloodstream Infections in Hospitalized Children in the United States, 2009–2016

Author:

Spaulding Alicen B1ORCID,Watson David1,Dreyfus Jill2,Heaton Phillip3,Grapentine Steven4,Bendel-Stenzel Ellen156,Kharbanda Anupam B7

Affiliation:

1. Center for Acute Care Outcomes, Children’s Minnesota Research Institute

2. Premier, Inc

3. Department of Laboratory Services

4. Pharmacy Department

5. Minnesota Neonatal Physicians

6. Midwest Fetal Care Center

7. Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Chief of Critical Care Services, Children’s Minnesota

Abstract

Abstract Background Bloodstream infections (BSIs) cause significant morbidity and mortality in children. Recent pediatric epidemiological data may inform prevention strategies and empiric antimicrobial therapy selection. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study from 2009 through 2016 utilizing demographic and microbiologic data on inpatients aged <19 years using the Premier Healthcare Database. BSIs were positive blood cultures without known contaminants. Hospitalization rate was the number of BSI-positive encounters per 1000 admissions. Community-acquired infections (CAIs) were cultures positive ≤2 days of admission among nonneonates. BSI patients were compared to documented positive BSI patients (non-BSI); differences were analyzed using χ2 test, t test, and Cochran-Armitage test for time trends. Results Among 1 809 751 encounters from 162 US hospitals, 5340 (0.30%) were BSI positive; CAIs were most common (50%). BSI patients were more often aged 1–5 years and had complex chronic conditions or central lines compared to non-BSI patients. The BSI hospitalization rate declined nonsignificantly over time (3.13 in 2009 to 2.98 in 2016, P = .08). Among pathogens, Escherichia coli (0.80 to 1.26), methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (0.83 to 1.98), and group A Streptococcus (0.16 to 0.37) significantly increased for nonneonates, while Streptococcus pneumoniae (1.07 to 0.26) and Enterococcus spp. (0.60 to 0.17) declined. Regional differences were greatest for E. coli and highest in the New England and South Atlantic regions. Conclusions Trends in pediatric BSI hospitalization rates varied by pathogen and regionally. Overall the BSI hospitalization rate did not significantly decline, indicating a continued need to improve pediatric BSI assessment and prevention.

Funder

Internal Research Grant Program at Children’s Minnesota

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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