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Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Incidence, etiology, risk factors and outcomes of pre‐engraftment bloodstream infections after first and second allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

Abstract

Introduction

With increasing number of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantations (allo-HCT) bloodstream infections (BSI) are still among the most common and serious complications. This study aimed to analyze the incidence, etiology, risk factors, and outcomes of pre-engraftment BSI after the first and the second allo-HCT.

Materials and methods

This is a retrospective study of 284 patients who underwent first allo-HCT and 37 patients after the second allo-HCT at the National Research Center for Hematology in Moscow, Russia, from January 2018 till September 2021.

Results

Cumulative incidence of pre-engraftment BSI was 29.9% after the first allo-HCT and 35.1% after the second (p = 0,805). Median time to the first BSI was 9 days (range 0–61 days) after the first and 16 days (range 1–28 days) after the second allo-HCT (p = 0.014). A total of 113 pathogens were isolated during 94 BSI episodes after the first allo-HCT (gram-negative bacteria 52.2%; gram-positive bacteria 47.7%). Fourteen pathogens were isolated during 14 BSI episodes after the second allo-HCT (gram-negative bacteria 50.0%; gram-positive bacteria 50.0%). The only significant difference was found in the rate of carbapenem-resistant gram-negative bacteria, which was higher after the second allo-HCT compared to the first (57.1% vs. 13.6%; p = 0.048).

Mismatched unrelated donor (HR 3.01; 95% CI:1.62-5.60; p<0.0001) and haploidentical donor transplantations (HR 1.84; 95% CI:1.02-3.33; p = 0.042) were the only independent risk factors associated with the higher risk of pre-engraftment BSI.

Overall 30-day survival after all BSI episodes was 94.4%,. Survival was lower after BSI during the second allo-HCT compared to the first (71.4% vs. 97.9%; p<0,0001), particularly after BSI caused by carbapenem-resistant gram-negative bacteria (25.0% vs. 100.0%; p = 0.0023). Non-relapse mortality rate at day +60 was 4.0%, and the risk was highly associated with primary graft failure (HR 9.62; 95% CI: 1.33-71.43), second allo-HCT (HR 6.80; 95% CI: 1.36-34.48), and pre-engraftment BSI caused by carbapenem-resistant gram-negative bacteria (HR 32.11; 95% CI: 4.91-210.15).

Conclusions

Pre-engraftment BSI is still a common complication after allo-HCT, particularly after mismatched unrelated and haploidentical donor transplantations. BSI incidence was slightly higher after the second allo-HCT with significantly higher rate of carbapenem-resistant BSI. Although pre-engraftment BSI would generally follow benign clinical course, survival was dramatically lower during the second allo-HCT especially after carbapenem-resistant BSI.

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