Nosocomial Enterobacter Meningitis: Risk Factors, Management, and Treatment Outcomes

Enterobacter species are increasingly a cause of nosocomial meningitis among neurosurgery patients, but risk factors for these infections are not well defined. A review of all adult patients hospitalized at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) Medical Center during an 8-year period identi...

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Published inClinical infectious diseases Vol. 37; no. 2; pp. 159 - 166
Main Authors Parodi, Stephen, Lechner, Arno, Osih, Regina, Vespa, Paul, Pegues, David
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chicago, IL The University of Chicago Press 15.07.2003
University of Chicago Press
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Summary:Enterobacter species are increasingly a cause of nosocomial meningitis among neurosurgery patients, but risk factors for these infections are not well defined. A review of all adult patients hospitalized at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) Medical Center during an 8-year period identified 15 postneurosurgical cases of Enterobacter meningitis (EM). Cure was achieved in 14 cases (93%), and efficacy was similar for carbapenem- and cephalosporin-based treatment. A matched case-control study comparing 26 controls with 13 case patients hospitalized exclusively at the UCLA Medical Center found that external cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage devices (odds ratio [OR], 21.8; P = .001), isolation of Enterobacter species from a non-CSF culture (OR, 24.6; P = .002), and prolonged administration of antimicrobial drugs before the diagnosis of meningitis that were inactive in vitro against Enterobacter species (OR, 13.3; P = .008) were independent risk factors for EM. Despite favorable treatment outcomes, EM is a serious infection associated with Enterobacter species colonization or infection at other surgical sites, with selective antimicrobial pressure, and with invasive CNS devices.
Bibliography:istex:FBA0D2EC3C7D83A47AD8593549B0020AC6019A19
Present affiliation: Infectious Diseases Unit, General Hospital Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria (A.L.), and Department of Medicine, Good Samaritan Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland (R.O.).
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ISSN:1058-4838
1537-6591
DOI:10.1086/375596