Early gram-positive bacteremia in BMT recipients: Impact of three different approaches to antimicrobial prophylaxis

C. Arns Da Cunha, D. Weisdorf, X. O. Shu, T. DeFor, J. D. Pastor, J. R. Johnson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

Antimicrobial prophylaxis against gram-positive bacteremia (GPB) following BMT may prevent infections but promote antimicrobial resistance. In a sequential cohort study involving 289 consecutive BMT recipients we compared three protocols for prevention of GPB (vancomycin prophylaxis, penicillin/cefazolin prophylaxis, and no specific GPB prophylaxis) with respect to incidence of GPB, mortality, and vancomycin use. GPB was associated with increased mortality (27% vs 15%; P = 0.02), but contributed to only five of 52 deaths in the study population, and only one of 15 subjects with viridans streptococcal bacteremia developed fatal septic shock. Vancomycin prophylaxis reduced the incidence of GPB (11%) compared to penicillin/cefazolin (27%) or no prophylaxis (40%) (all P < 0.03), but did not significantly reduce mortality. The incidence of fungemia, gram-negative bacteremia, and infection-associated mortality was unaffected by GPB prophylaxis. Vancomycin use was substantially greater in the vancomycin prophylaxis group. We conclude that in comparison with vancomycin prophylaxis, BMT support regimens that do not include vancomycin prophylaxis allow reduced overall vancomycin use without an apparent increase in early post-BMT mortality, despite the greater associated frequency of GPB.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)173-180
Number of pages8
JournalBone marrow transplantation
Volume21
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2 1998

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Patti Anderson, R Ph, helped review pharmacy records. Patti Kelly helped prepare the manuscript. We thank the staff and patients of the UMHC BMT services for their participation and assistance. Financial support was from National Institutes of Health (DK47504, JRJ; CA21737, DW).

Keywords

  • Bacteremia
  • Drug resistance, microbial
  • Gram-positive bacterial infections
  • Staphylococcal infections
  • Streptococcal infections
  • Vancomycin

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