Abstract
Background
There is little descriptive data on Stenotrophomonas maltophilia hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) in critically ill patients. The optimal modalities of antimicrobial therapy remain to be determined. Our objective was to describe the epidemiology and prognostic factors associated with S. maltophilia pneumonia, focusing on antimicrobial therapy.
Methods
This nationwide retrospective study included all patients admitted to 25 French mixed intensive care units between 2012 and 2017 with hospital-acquired S. maltophilia HAP during intensive care unit stay. Primary endpoint was time to in-hospital death. Secondary endpoints included microbiologic effectiveness and antimicrobial therapeutic modalities such as delay to appropriate antimicrobial treatment, mono versus combination therapy, and duration of antimicrobial therapy.
Results
Of the 282 patients included, 84% were intubated at S. maltophilia HAP diagnosis for duration of 11 [5–18] days. The Simplified Acute Physiology Score II was 47 [36–63], and the in-hospital mortality was 49.7%. Underlying chronic pulmonary comorbidities were present in 14.1% of cases. Empirical antimicrobial therapy was considered effective on S. maltophilia according to susceptibility patterns in only 30% of cases. Delay to appropriate antimicrobial treatment had, however, no significant impact on the primary endpoint. Survival analysis did not show any benefit from combination antimicrobial therapy (HR = 1.27, 95%CI [0.88; 1.83], p = 0.20) or prolonged antimicrobial therapy for more than 7 days (HR = 1.06, 95%CI [0.6; 1.86], p = 0.84). No differences were noted in in-hospital death irrespective of an appropriate and timely empiric antimicrobial therapy between mono- versus polymicrobial S. maltophilia HAP (p = 0.273). The duration of ventilation prior to S. maltophilia HAP diagnosis and ICU length of stay were shorter in patients with monomicrobial S. maltophilia HAP (p = 0.031 and p = 0.034 respectively).
Conclusions
S. maltophilia HAP occurred in severe, long-stay intensive care patients who mainly required prolonged invasive ventilation. Empirical antimicrobial therapy was barely effective while antimicrobial treatment modalities had no significant impact on hospital survival.
Trial registration
Keywords: Hospital-acquired pneumonia, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Intensive care, Antimicrobial therapy, Combination therapy
Background
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is one of the 10 most frequently isolated pathogens responsible for hospital-acquired pneumonias (HAPs) in intensive care unit (ICU) patients in western countries [1, 2], representing approximately 5% of positive pulmonary samples. Previous studies identified several risk factors for developing S. maltophilia HAP in critically ill patients, such as prolonged ICU hospitalization associated with invasive procedures, extended periods of mechanical ventilation, or exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics [3–5]. Therefore, S. maltophilia pneumonia occurs preferentially in patients with the poorest prognosis [6, 7]. However, these studies were conducted from heterogeneous and small cohorts of patients. The severity of S. maltophilia HAP and antimicrobial therapy modalities were sparsely reported [3, 4]. Hence, data are lacking to draw recommendations on the optimal therapeutic strategies against S. maltophilia pneumonia.
We undertook a large nationwide multicenter retrospective study with the main objective to demonstrate that modalities of antibiotic therapy, including empirical antimicrobial choice, whether a combination therapy was used, or the duration of the therapy, would influence in-hospital mortality. Secondary objectives were to describe the characteristics of ICU patients with S. maltophilia HAP and to draw prognostic factors of these pneumonias.
Methods
Design of the study and setting
The medical records of patients who experienced S. maltophilia pneumonia from January 2012 to January 2017 were collected from 25 ICUs of the French Society of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine (SFAR) and AZUREA networks [8]. Participating centers and case-mixes are listed in Additional file 1.
The collected data involved both ICU and hospital stays. Follow-up was stopped either after hospital discharge or death, whichever occurred first.
Participants
Eligibility criteria
All patients aged over 18 years who were admitted to the participating ICUs and presenting with a documented diagnosis of S. maltophilia pneumonia during their ICU stay were eligible.
Source and method of selection
The patient’s files were extracted through French hospital discharge database containing individual records of all hospital stays using International Classification of Disease (ICD-10) for the terms “Stenotrophomonas maltophilia” and “pneumonia.” In addition, ICU medical charts were cross-checked with microbiology laboratory-specific information systems to ensure exhaustivity.
Each medical record was analyzed by local investigators to determine if clinical, biological, and/or radiological signs of S. maltophilia HAP were present, thus excluding respiratory tract colonizations (defined as a positive respiratory sample without clinical, biological, and/or radiological signs of S. maltophilia pneumonia). In case of uncertainty, consensus was obtained between local infectious disease specialists and study coordinators (PG, AB) to clarify S. maltophilia HAP cases.
Definitions
Pneumonia was defined as follows: (i) new or progressive lung infiltrate, (ii) temperature > 38 °C or < 36.5 °C, leukocyte count > 12,000 μl−1 or < 4000 μl−1, purulent endotracheal aspirate or sputum, (iii) positive respiratory sample (see below), and (iv) decline in oxygenation [9, 10]. HAP was defined as a pneumonia not incubating at the time of hospital admission and occurring 48 h or more after admission. Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) was defined as a pneumonia occurring 48 h or more after tracheal intubation [9].
The clinical cure of S. maltophilia pneumonia was defined by the absence of pneumonia criteria 48 h after antimicrobial therapy cessation. Treatment failure was defined as a failure of first-line treatment or death attributable to S. maltophilia pneumonia. Recurrence was defined as the onset of new pneumonia criteria associated with a positive respiratory sample with S. maltophilia after the initial pneumonia was considered successfully cured.
Empirical antimicrobial therapy was defined as the first agents prescribed for the initial treatment of HAP (effective or not on S. maltophilia) finally diagnosed as being caused by S. maltophilia. Empirical antimicrobial therapy was considered as effective if the S. maltophilia strain cultured from the respiratory sample was susceptible to at least one of the antimicrobial agents. Combination therapy was defined as the administration of at least two antimicrobial agents a priori (before S. maltophilia HAP has been confirmed, usually within 48 h) or a posteriori (after S. maltophilia HAP has been confirmed) effective on the S. maltophilia strain for more than 24 h.
Data collection
Usual demographic variables were collected, including previous hospital stays and previous exposure to antimicrobial therapies (agents and durations). Simplified Acute Physiology Score II (SAPSII) and the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score were assessed.
On the day of S. maltophilia HAP diagnosis, the SOFA score was collected, as well as the number and type of invasive devices inserted. The severity of hypoxemia was graded according to the Berlin acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) criteria [11]. Requirements for high-flow nasal oxygen therapy, non-invasive or invasive mechanical ventilation, or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) were reported. Empirical antimicrobial therapy and secondary adaptations were recorded, as were durations.
Diagnosis of positive bacterial culture
In case of S. maltophilia isolation, the culture was considered to be positive (either mono- or polymicrobial infection) with the following cutoff: (1) for minimally contaminated lower respiratory tract sample with quantitative culture, the threshold was 104 colony-forming units (CFU)/ml for bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and the cutoff was 103 CFU/ml for protected specimen brush (PSB) or protected (plugged) telescoping catheter (PTC); (2) nonprotected sample (endotracheal aspirate, ETA) with quantitative culture (105 CFU/ml); or (3) sputum bacteriology with quantitative culture (107 CFU/ml) [12].
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST)
S. maltophilia identification characteristics (date of isolation and type of respiratory tract sampling) and antimicrobial susceptibility testing were independently performed by each microbiology laboratory. AST was performed on isolates using disk diffusion or automated testing methods according to guidelines and breakpoints established by the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) [13].
Data management
Data were collected and managed using Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) software [14]. The database was approved by the institutional review board of the SFAR (IRB00010254-2015-010), which waived the need for signed informed consent of the participants, in accordance with the French legislation on noninterventional studies [15]. The study was declared on clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03506191). This manuscript was written in accordance with the STROBE statement for the reporting of observational studies in epidemiology.
Statistical analysis
The results are expressed as the number of patients (%) for categorical variables and mean (± standard deviation) or median [IQR] for continuous variables.
Prognostic factors associated with time to in-hospital death were studied using the Cox proportional hazard model. Time to in-hospital death was calculated from the diagnostic date of S. maltophilia to death. The follow-up was censored at discharge from the ICU and/or the hospital. Baseline prognostic factors were age, SAPS II, mechanical ventilation at diagnosis, VAP, duration of mechanical ventilation before the diagnosis, SOFA score at diagnosis, bacteremia, mono/polymicrobial pneumonia, use of empirical antimicrobial therapy, and use of empirical antimicrobial therapy effective against S. maltophilia. Other antimicrobial therapy-related variables were not defined as baseline and were thus entered in the model as time-dependent variables, including time elapsed between sample and effective antimicrobial therapy, use of effective combination antimicrobial therapy, and duration of effective antimicrobial therapy against S. maltophilia (monotherapy or combination therapy).
Baseline and time-dependent variables associated (p < 0.05) with outcome in the univariate analysis and that were present at the diagnosis were considered for the multivariate model, and the final model was selected using backward stepwise regression (p < 0.05). Hazard ratios (HR) were calculated accordingly with their 95% confidence intervals (CI).
We compared the time to in-hospital death between patients who received or not an empirical antimicrobial therapy effective against S. maltophilia using propensity score framework. The variables used for propensity score estimations were age, sex, SOFA score at diagnosis, SAPS II, and the ICU length of stay before pneumonia diagnosis. The two groups of patients were matched using a 1:1 nearest neighbor matching algorithm with replacement, using a caliper of 0.2 of the standard deviation of the propensity score on the logit scale [16]. Covariate balance between the two groups was assessed after matching, and we considered an absolute standardized difference (ASD) less than 0.1 as evidence of balance [17]. Then, time to in-hospital death was compared between matched groups using a Cox proportional hazard model. The 95% confidence intervals of the estimated hazard ratio (empirical antimicrobial therapy yes vs no) were estimated using robust standard error [18].
Significance was defined as p values < 0.05. Statistical tests were two-sided. Statistical analyses were performed using R 3.5.0 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, http://www.R-project.org/, Vienna, Austria).
Results
Population
Of the 102,316 patients admitted to the 25 ICUs within the study period, 282 (0.27%) with a S. maltophilia pneumonia were included (Fig. 1). Our population was predominantly male (69.9%), with an age of 65 [56–74] years, mostly admitted for medical reasons (59.2%) or emergent surgery (29.4%). Severity at admission was illustrated by SOFA score (8 [5–11]) and SAPSII (47 [36–63]). ICU and hospital lengths of stay were 32 [19–58] and 54 [30–94] days, respectively. The overall in-hospital mortality rate was 49.7% (Table 1). There was no difference in trends of patient inclusion and distribution over years. 48, 51, 60, 65, and 59 patients were included in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016 respectively with similar distributions in terms of mortality.
Table 1.
Variables | Total N = 282 |
---|---|
Gender, male | 197 (69.9) |
Age, years | 65 [56–74] |
BMI (kg m− 2) | 25.3 [22–28.8] |
Reason for ICU admission | |
Medical condition | 167 (59.2) |
Scheduled surgery | 32 (11.3) |
Emergent surgery | 83 (29.4) |
Postoperative period of cardiac surgery | 60 (21.3) |
Previous carriage of S. maltophilia | 13 (4.6) |
Pulmonary comorbidities | |
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 51 (18.1) |
Chronic respiratory insufficiency | 30 (10.6) |
Cystic fibrosis | 2 (0.7) |
Other comorbidities | |
Hypertension | 147 (52.1) |
Congestive heart failure | 66 (23.4) |
Dialysis-dependent chronic kidney disease | 8 (2.8) |
Liver cirrhosis | 22 (7.8) |
Insulin-requiring diabetes | 31 (11) |
Severe neurologic disability | 30 (10.6) |
Habits | |
Active smoking | 86 (30.5) |
Chronic alcohol abuse | 47 (16.7) |
Drug abuse | 8 (2.8) |
Immune comprise conditions (n, %) | |
Neutropenia | 1 (0.3) |
HIV and/or CD4 count < 50/mm3 | 1 (0.3) |
Recent or ongoing chemotherapy | 11 (3.9) |
Hematologic malignancy | 16 (5.7) |
Solid tumor being actively treated | 20 (7.1) |
Solid tumor in remission | 22 (7.8) |
Immunosuppressive therapy or corticosteroids use > 0.5 mg/kg > 30 days | 34 (12) |
Innate or acquired immune deficiency | 1 (0.3) |
Severity scores | |
SOFA score at admission | 8 [5–11] |
SAPS II at 24 h | 47 [36–63] |
Ventilator-associated pneumonia | 228 (80.8) |
Duration of ventilation before S. maltophilia HAP, days | 11 [5–18] |
ICU length of stay, days | 32 [19–58] |
Hospital length of stay, days | 54 [30–94] |
Number of days between hospital admission and S. maltophilia HAP | 16 [8–27] |
Number of days between ICU admission and S. maltophilia HAP | 11 [5–19] |
Mortality | 140 (49.7) |
Mortality directly attributable to S. maltophilia | 34 (24.3) |
Data are expressed as number and percentage or median [interquartile range] as appropriate
BMI body mass index, HAP hospital-acquired pneumonia, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, ICU intensive care unit, IQR interquartile range, SAPS Simplified Acute Physiology Score, SD standard deviation, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, S. maltophilia Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
Patients had been hospitalized in the ICU for 11 [5–19] days at the time of onset of S. maltophilia pneumonia. Forty patients (14.2%) presented with a chronic underlying pulmonary disease. Other characteristics of patients are described in Table 1, and invasive devices are reported in Additional file 2: Table S1 in the online data supplement.
Description of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia hospital-acquired pneumonia
Characteristics of S. maltophilia HAP are described in Table 2. Briefly, 41.6% of S. maltophilia pneumonias were monomicrobial and 80.8% were VAP. Blood culture was concomitantly positive in only 7.1% of cases.
Table 2.
Variables | Total N = 282 |
---|---|
Monomicrobial pneumonia (S. maltophilia only) (n, (%)) | 117 (41.6) |
Other microorganisms identified (polymicrobial) (n, (%)) | |
Acinetobacter baumanii | 7 (4.3) |
Citrobacter spp. | 7 (4.3) |
Enterobacter spp. | 30 (18.3) |
Enterococcus spp. | 6 (3.7) |
Escherichia coli | 25 (15.2) |
Haemophilus | 3 (1.8) |
Hafnia alvei | 3 (1.8) |
Klebsiella spp. | 25 (15.2) |
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus | 3 (1.8) |
Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus | 13 (7.9) |
Morganella morganii | 1 (0.6) |
Proteus spp. | 7 (4.3) |
Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 49 (29.9) |
Serratia spp. | 8 (4.9) |
Streptococcus spp. | 1 (0.6) |
Others | 10 (6.1) |
S. maltophilia pneumonia-related manifestations (n, (%)) | |
Associated bacteremia | 20 (7.1) |
Associated empyema thoracis | 25 (8.9) |
Associated septic shock | 123 (43.6) |
Total number of days of norepinephrine infusion (median [IQR]) | 0 [0–6] |
Severity of pneumonia | |
Oxygenation level regarding S. maltophilia HAP (n, (%)) | |
Hypoxemia with PaO2/FIO2 > 300 mmHg with PEEP ≥ 5 cmH2O | 45 (16) |
Mild ARDS | 98 (34.7) |
Moderate ARDS | 101 (35.8) |
Severe ARDS | 36 (12.7) |
Prone positioning (n, (%)) | 13 (4.6) |
ECMO requirement | 15 (5.3) |
Veno-venous | 8 (53.3) |
Veno-arterial | 7 (46.7) |
Data is presented as number (%) or median [IQR]. Mild ARDS (200 mmHg < PaO2/FiO2 ≤ 300 mmHg with PEEP ≥ 5 cmH2O), moderate ARDS (100 mmHg < PaO2/FiO2 ≤ 200 mmHg with PEEP ≥ 5 cmH2O), severe ARDS (PaO2/FiO2 ≤ 100 mmHg with PEEP ≥ 5 cmH2O)
S. maltophilia, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia; ARDS, Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, was defined according to the Berlin definition; PEEP, positive end-expiratory pressure
Microbiological diagnosis methods for isolation of S. maltophilia are presented in Additional file 3: Table S2 in the online data supplement. Patients with S. maltophilia VAP had a duration of mechanical ventilation before the onset of pneumonia of 11 [5–18] days. S. maltophilia pneumonia-related septic shock was present in 123 patients (43.6%) within 48 h of S. maltophilia HAP (septic shock attributed to pneumonia by clinicians and without other identified cause in the post hoc analysis). Among these patients who developed septic shock, 38 (30.8%) did not receive initial empirical antimicrobial therapy. Forty-nine percent of patients fulfilled moderate or severe ARDS criteria.
Antimicrobial therapy
The description of antimicrobial therapy modalities is reported in Table 3. Before the onset of S. maltophilia pneumonia, patients received 3 [2–4] prior antimicrobial therapies for at least 5 consecutive days in ICU. Empirical antimicrobial therapy was a posteriori effective against S. maltophilia in 30.1% of cases. The duration of effective antimicrobial therapy on S. maltophilia was 11 [7–15] days. A combination of antimicrobials effective against S. maltophilia was used in 59.4% of patients for 7 [5–12] days.
Table 3.
Variables | Total N = 282 |
---|---|
Number of antimicrobial therapy lines administered within 30 days before diagnosis (median [IQR]) | 3 [2–4] |
Number of days with initial ineffective antimicrobial therapy on S. maltophilia (median [IQR]) | 2 [2–3.5] |
Most commonly prescribed antimicrobial agents before S. maltophilia HAP onset (n, (%)) | |
Amoxicillin | 20 (7.1) |
Amoxicillin–clavulanate | 61 (21.6) |
Third-generation cephalosporin | 93 (33) |
Cefepime | 25 (8.9) |
Ceftazidime | 17 (6) |
Ticarcillin | 4 (1.4) |
Ticarcillin–clavulanate | 10 (3.5) |
Piperacillin | 15 (5.3) |
Piperacillin–tazobactam | 97 (34.4) |
Carbapenem | 63 (22.3) |
Aminoglycoside | 70 (24.8) |
Fluoroquinolone | 40 (14.2) |
Trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole | 9 (3.2) |
Glycopeptide | 59 (20.9) |
Metronidazole | 32 (11.3) |
Linezolid | 31 (11) |
Others | 71 (25.2) |
Empirical antimicrobial therapy (n, (%)) | 166 (58.8) |
Number of antimicrobial agents for empirical antimicrobial therapy (median, [IQR]) | 1 [0–2] |
Efficient empirical therapy on S. maltophilia (n, (%)) | 50 (30.1) |
Combination antimicrobial therapy (2 or more) targeting S. maltophilia (n, (%)) | 167 (59.4) |
Duration of antimicrobial therapy targeting S. maltophilia, days (median, [IQR]) | 11 [7–15] |
Duration of combined (2 or more) antimicrobial therapy targeting S. maltophilia, days (median, [IQR]) | 7 [5–12] |
S. maltophilia is intrinsically resistant to amoxicillin, amoxicillin/clavulanate, ticarcillin, piperacillin/tazobactam, carbapenems, and aminoglycosides (EUCAST expert rules version 3.1—26 Sept 2016). Data are presented as median, interquartile range ([IQR]), or number (percentage) (n, (%)) as appropriate
HAP hospital-acquired pneumonia
Microbiological data
AST of S. maltophilia strains is presented in Fig. 2a. Trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) (88.1%) and ticarcillin–clavulanate (73.3%) remained highly active against more than two thirds of S. maltophilia strains. The main antimicrobial therapies prescribed to treat S. maltophilia HAP after identification were TMP-SMX (29%), ciprofloxacin (25%), and ticarcillin–clavulanate (24%) (Fig. 2b).
Prognosis
Treatment failure occurred in 65 patients (23.1%). Recurrence of S. maltophilia pneumonia was diagnosed in 48 patients (17.0%). Co-infection with another pathogen, mostly Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n = 30), was diagnosed in 70 patients (24.8%) during recurrence (Additional file 4: Table S3).
In univariate analysis, variables associated with the primary endpoint (i.e., time to in-hospital death) were age (HR = 1.025, 95%CI [1.012; 1.038], p = 0.0001), SAPS II (HR = 1.009, 95%CI [1.001; 1.018], p = 0.036), and SOFA score at pneumonia diagnosis (HR = 1.099, 95% CI [1.057; 1.142], p < 0.0001) (Table 4). The subsequent occurrence of a septic shock was significantly associated with an increased risk of death (HR = 3.070, 95%CI [1.9; 5.0], p < 0.0001).
Table 4.
Variables | Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
HR [95%CI] | p value | HR [95%CI] | p value | |
Age | 1.025 [1.012; 1.038] | 0.0001 | 1.02 [1.01; 1.04] | 0.001 |
SAPS II | 1.009 [1.001; 1.018] | 0.036 | ||
Mechanical ventilation at diagnosis | 1.692 [0.83; 3.46] | 0.151 | ||
VAP | 0.748 [0.49; 1.14] | 0.178 | ||
Duration of MV before the diagnosis | 0.997 [0.988; 1.006] | 0.462 | ||
SOFA score at diagnosis | 1.099 [1.057; 1.142] | < 0.0001 | 1.1 [1.06; 1.15] | < 0.001 |
Bacteremia | 0.814 [0.41; 1.60] | 0.551 | ||
Monomicrobial pneumonia | 1.368 [0.98; 1.91] | 0.066 | ||
Co-infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 0.843 [0.53; 1.33] | 0.464 | ||
Time elapsed between pulmonary sample and effective antimicrobial therapy | 0.99 [0.97; 1.01] | 0.434 | ||
< 24 h | 1 | |||
24–48 h | 1.22 [0.74; 2] | 0.429 | ||
> 48 h | 1.34 [0.85; 2.12] | 0.204 | ||
Empirical antibiotic therapy | 1.019 [0.73; 1.43] | 0.914 | ||
Subsequent septic shock | 3.070 [1.9; 5.0] | < 0.0001 | ||
Empirical antibiotic therapy effective against S. maltophilia | 0.839 [0.52; 1.35] | 0.4705 | ||
Effective combination antimicrobial therapy | 1.27 [0.88; 1.83] | 0.204 | ||
Duration of effective antimicrobial therapy against S. maltophilia | 1.03 [0.98;1.07] | 0.243 | ||
< 7 days | 1 | |||
7–14 days | 1.06 [0.6; 1.86] | 0.842 | ||
> 14 days | 0.88 [0.45; 1.71] | 0.706 | ||
Duration of effective combination therapy against S. maltophilia | 0.99 [0.96; 1.03] | 0.679 | ||
< 7 days | 1 | |||
7–14 days | 0.82 [0.52; 1.29] | 0.393 | ||
> 14 days | 0.71 [0.39; 1.29] | 0.262 |
SAPS Simplified Acute Physiology Score, VAP ventilator-associated pneumonia, MV mechanical ventilation, HR hazard ratio, S. maltophilia Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment
Neither the duration of treatment nor the use of combination therapy directed against S. maltophilia was associated with the primary endpoint (Table 4). Other commonly reported risk factors for S. maltophilia HAP (i.e., immunosuppression, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), prior antimicrobial therapy) were not statistically associated with time to in-hospital death.
In multivariate analysis, only age (HR = 1.02, 95% CI [1.01; 1.04], p = 0.001) and SOFA score at S. maltophilia pneumonia diagnosis (HR = 1.1, 95%CI [1.06; 1.15], p < 0.001) were associated with in-hospital death (Table 4). Subsequent septic shock was not included in the multivariate analysis because it was a consequence and not present at the diagnosis of S. maltophilia. The results were similar when only considering VAP in our cohort (N = 228) (Additional file 5: Table S4). Finally, we performed a statistical analysis based on a propensity score to evaluate the effect of an empirical antibiotic therapy effective on S. maltophilia on the primary endpoint (Additional file 6: Table S5). After matching, we compared 48 patients who received appropriate empirical antibiotic therapy versus 222 who did not (Additional file 7: Table S6). This analysis confirmed the previous results (HR = 0.891, 95%CI [0.498–1.593], p = 0.697).
Mono- and polymicrobial S. maltophilia HAP
The aforementioned results remained unchanged when considering only monomicrobial S. maltophilia pneumonia (n = 117) (HR = 1.08, 95%CI [1.01; 1.15], p = 0.021 for SOFA score at S. maltophilia pneumonia diagnosis). Comparisons of characteristics and outcomes between mono- and polymicrobial S. maltophilia HAP are provided in Table 5. No differences were noted in in-hospital death irrespective of an appropriate and timely empiric antimicrobial therapy between mono- versus polymicrobial S. maltophilia HAP. A similar number of VAP occurred in both groups, 91 (77.8%) versus 136 (82.9%) (p = 0.280) for mono- and polymicrobial HAP respectively. The duration of ventilation prior to S. maltophilia HAP diagnosis and ICU length of stay were shorter in patients with monomicrobial S. maltophilia HAP.
Table 5.
Variables | Sm only N = 117 | Polymicrobial Sm HAP N = 164 | p value |
---|---|---|---|
Gender, male | 78 (66.7) | 119 (72.6) | 0.362 |
Age, years | 67 [59–76] | 64 [55–72] | 0.024 |
BMI (kg m−2) | 24.6 [21.1–29.6] | 25.7 [22.3–28.4] | 0.361 |
Reason for ICU admission | 0.024 | ||
Medical condition | 80 (68.4) | 87 (53) | |
Scheduled surgery | 8 (6.8) | 24 (14.6) | |
Emergent surgery | 29 (24.8) | 53 (32.3) | |
Previous carriage of S. maltophilia | 5 (4.3) | 6 (3.7) | 0.812 |
Pulmonary comorbidities | |||
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 27 (23.1) | 24 (14.6) | 0.084 |
Chronic respiratory insufficiency | 15 (12.8) | 14 (8.5) | 0.245 |
Cystic fibrosis | 0 (0) | 2 (1.2) | 0.512 |
Prior exposure to carbapenems | 27 (23.1) | 37 (22.5) | 0.723 |
Susceptibility to trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole | 97 (82.9) | 147 (89.6) | 0.424 |
Severity scores | |||
SOFA score at admission | 8 [5–11] | 8 [5–11] | 0.381 |
SAPS II at 24 h | 48 [37–62] | 47 [36–63] | 0.672 |
Ventilator-associated pneumonia | 91 (77.8) | 136 (82.9) | 0.280 |
Duration of mechanical ventilation prior to S. maltophilia HAP, days | 9 [2–17] | 11 [6–20] | 0.031 |
ICU length of stay, days | 28 [16–49] | 36 [22–60] | 0.034 |
Hospital length of stay, days | 45 [26–80] | 59 [32–98] | 0.062 |
Number of days between hospital admission and S. maltophilia HAP | 14 [8–23] | 17 [8–31] | 0.294 |
Number of days between ICU admission and S. maltophilia HAP | 10 [5–18] | 12 [6–20] | 0.046 |
Empiric antibiotic therapy | 67 (57.3) | 99 (60.4) | 0.602 |
Combination therapy active on S. maltophilia | 66 (56.4) | 100 (61.0) | 0.407 |
Overall in-hospital mortality | 63 (53.8) | 74 (45.1) | 0.228 |
In-hospital mortality according to empiric antimicrobial therapy | 0.273 | ||
Appropriate | 8 (6.8) | 16 (9.8) | |
Inappropriate | 24 (20.5) | 30 (18.3) |
Data are presented as median, interquartile range ([IQR]), or number (percentage) (n, (%)) as appropriate
BMI body mass index, HAP hospital-acquired pneumonia, SAPS Simplified Acute Physiology Score, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, S. maltophilia Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
Discussion
Herein, we report the largest cohort study of critically ill patients developing S. maltophilia HAP. Regarding the large screening, the prevalence of S. maltophilia HAP remained very low. The majority of S. maltophilia HAP was VAP and occurred in patients ventilated for more than 10 days and previously exposed to several antimicrobial therapies. The mortality rate of these patients remained high, but surprisingly, the treatment delay in adequate antimicrobial therapy targeting S. maltophilia was not found to be associated with mortality. This observation may be the result of (i) a low virulence of the pathogen, (ii) the underlying condition of the critically ill patient being more contributive to the outcome than S. maltophilia HAP itself, or (iii) a 24- to 48-h delay in the treatment of S. maltophilia HAP had no real impact. Finally, if SAPSII and SOFA score were independently associated with mortality, no specific pneumonia or antimicrobial therapy-related factors impacted the outcome.
Our study population shares common features with previously published reports [3, 4, 6, 7, 19–23]. Indeed, S. maltophilia pneumonia develops in high-risk phenotypes patients, i.e., long ICU/hospital length of stay and duration of mechanical ventilation. Despite a mortality rate of approximately 50%, it is difficult to delineate direct attributable mortality of S. maltophilia HAP from mortality linked to underlying diseases [24]. Indeed, the prolonged ICU length of stay preceding S. maltophilia isolation and the number of prior antimicrobial therapies suggest noticeable patient frailty and complicated medical history. These factors have been associated to high mortality in patients with resistant bacteria in ICU [25]. S. maltophilia HAP could also be perceived as a final septic insult in long-stayer patients, promoting care withdrawal from the medical team.
Previous studies that included a small number of patients [3, 4, 6, 19–23, 26–31] suggested that immune-compromised conditions, COPD, prior cardiac surgery, or prior antimicrobial therapy were risk factors for S. maltophilia HAP. Conversely, our large series of mixed ICU patients did not confirm these elements. This implies that the involvement of S. maltophilia in late onset HAP should be considered and be kept in mind by all critical care physicians. However, in our series, initial antimicrobial therapy inactive against S. maltophilia was not a risk factor for in-hospital mortality, arguing against a systematic coverage of S. maltophilia by empirical antimicrobial therapy in this setting.
Although the prolonged duration of antimicrobial treatment is a well-known risk factor for emergence of multidrug resistant (MDR) bacteria [32], it did not appear to be discriminant in our study, irrespective of the class of antimicrobial agent previously administered. These results are in accordance with previously published literature on continuation or de-escalation of beta-lactam antibiotics and emergence of MDR [31]. Indeed, different regimens were used in our population, with various durations of treatment before S. maltophilia HAP diagnosis without apparent consequences on S. maltophilia emergence and susceptibility profiles. Soubirou et al. found that the increase in use of antimicrobial class was an independent predictor of S. maltophilia emergence in VAP [33]. It is however conceivable that some patients of our cohort may be colonized with other non-fermenting Gram-negative bacilli. Actually, almost 20% of patients had COPD or chronic respiratory insufficiency and might be regularly exposed to antibiotics. Nseir et al. and Saugel et al. reported 63% and 25% respectively incidence of COPD patients with S. maltophilia pneumonia [3, 4].
Despite clinical signs of HAP, only 59% of patients readily received empirical antimicrobial therapy (Additional file 4: Table S3). This highlights the variable implementation and adherence to antimicrobial bundles of care and stewardship programs [34–36]. Pathmanathan et al. previously reported no measurable impact of antibiotic therapy in patients without evidence of consolidation which suggests colonization [23]. In our study, colonization was excluded. Although it is currently suggested to start antibiotics early in patients with suspected VAP [37], physicians may have been expecting a definitive identification with the resistance profile of microorganisms possibly involved to restrain the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, especially in patients previously exposed to several antibiotic regimens. Tracheobronchitis and pneumonia may also be hard to be differentiated and need time to be distinguished.
Of note, the interplay between resistance and virulence remains complex [38]. In these patients already exposed to several series of antimicrobial therapies, with an extended hospital length of stay, the likelihood of MDR bacteria involvement was very high. Moreover, due to its natural resistance to multiple antimicrobial agents, only one third of empirical antimicrobial therapies was actually effective against S. maltophilia. Conversely to other authors [39], but in accordance with studies on Pseudomonas aeruginosa VAP, the delayed administration of effective antimicrobial treatment was not statistically associated with increased mortality [40, 41].
The duration of S. maltophilia HAP antimicrobial therapy is still subject to debate. The comparison of short (< 8 days) versus prolonged (8 days and greater) antibiotic course could not properly be investigated in our study because of its design. Chastre et al. demonstrated that an 8-day course of antibiotic therapy for VAP was not inferior to a longer duration, but only 0.8% of patients had an S. maltophilia VAP [42]. However, it was suggested that patients infected with difficult-to-treat pathogens, immunocompromised patients, and patients at high risk for relapse may require a longer duration of antibiotic therapy. In our study, we identified neither the duration of antimicrobial treatment nor the combination of antibiotic therapies as significant risk factors for in-hospital death. Low virulence of S. maltophilia strains may partially explain these findings. In a recent retrospective study focused on the interest of combination therapy, Shah et al. reported that combination of antibiotic therapies yielded similar clinical efficacy and resistance development compared to monotherapy [43].
Optimal antimicrobial against S. maltophilia HAP may raise some concerns. The S. maltophilia strains in our study had a preserved susceptibility to ticarcillin–clavulanate and TMP-SMX, 73 and 88% respectively as expected [44]. However, only 29% of S. maltophilia HAP were treated with TMP-SMX. These discrepancies may be related to ICU physicians’ habits, the fear of TMP-SMX-related side effects, and the type of antibiotics administered prior to occurrence of S. maltophilia HAP. The use of fluoroquinolones could have been considered easier. When prescribed, TMP-SMX was combined with another antibiotic effective on S. maltophilia in 80% of cases. In addition, antimicrobial agent shortages change antimicrobial therapy armamentarium, with a cessation of manufacture of ticarcillin–clavulanate in 2015 [45]. Although ceftazidime/avibactam has poor activity on S. maltophilia [46], it may restore the susceptibility to aztreonam through the inhibition of the L2 β-lactamase in vitro [47]. The clinical efficacy of this combination has been reported in a case report of a transplant renal patient [48].
Augmented renal clearance can alter the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (PK/PD) of several antimicrobial agents, mainly ß-lactams [49]. The detailed dosages of antimicrobial agents and the measured creatinine clearance were not collected in the present study. However, TMP-SMX and fluoroquinolones were the most prescribed agents. Their plasma concentrations are not dramatically influenced by augmented renal clearance and not easily monitored in daily practice.
Limitations
Our study differs from previous studies, where patients with and without S. maltophilia infection were compared. We did not consider S. maltophilia colonizations but only HAP, unlike previous studies [4]. In the case of a polymicrobial sample, it is uncertain which bacteria were responsible for the HAP. One may argue that our study suffers from inaccurate diagnoses differentiating between VAP and ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis due to its retrospective design using ICD codes. We acknowledge that the diagnosis method (ETA versus BAL or PSB) may influence the detection of S. maltophilia. This was a pragmatic study that describes different ICU practices, and to date, there is no formal evidence of improved outcomes depending on the diagnosis method used [50]. Despite strict inclusion criteria, and search for consensus in case of debatable case, it is possible that the physician’s judgment and diagnosis reported in the medical record were inaccurate. However, 80% of HAP were VAP in our study and excluding non-ventilated patients did not alter the observed results.
Conclusions
S. maltophilia HAP had a very low incidence in critically ill patients but was associated with high mortality rate in this large multicenter study. Its onset is hard to predict because of lack of specific risk factors but occurs mainly in long-stay ICU patients. The present study did not provide evidence of a significant effect of delay, duration, or combination of antimicrobial therapy on mortality. Efforts in developing novel and effective approaches for prevention are warranted.
Supplementary information
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Geoffroy Cagninacci and Cédric Baumann for their excellent implementation and support of RedCap.
Prof Jean-Michel Constantin MD. PhD: Pôle de Médecine Péri-Opératoire (MPO), Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Clermont-Ferrand, Clermont-Ferrand, France ; mixed ICU.
Dr Thomas Godet MD.: Réanimation Adultes et Soins Continus, Pôle de Médecine Péri-opératoire, Hôpital Estaing, CHU de Clermont-Ferrand, France ; mixed ICU.
Dr Philippe Guerci MD.: Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Institut Lorrain du Coeur et des Vaisseaux, University Hospital of Nancy, Vandoeuvre-Lès-Nancy, France; mixed surgical ICU.
Dr Sebastien Perbet MD. PhD.: Réanimation Médico-Chirurgicale, Pôle de Médecine Péri-opératoire, Hôpital Gabriel Montpied, CHU de Clermont-Ferrand, France ; mixed ICU.
Dr Stanislas Ledochowski MD.: Service de Réanimation Polyvalente, Groupement Hospitalier Nord Dauphiné- Centre Hospitalier Pierre Oudot, Bourgoin-Jallieu, France ; mixed ICU.
Take-home message
In critically ill patients with Stenotrophomonas maltophilia hospital-acquired pneumonia, delay to appropriate antimicrobial treatment, combination antimicrobial therapy, or prolonged antimicrobial therapy may not be associated with increased survival.
Abbreviations
- ARDS
Acute respiratory distress syndrome
- AST
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing
- BAL
Bronchoalveolar lavage
- CFU
Colony-forming units
- ETA
Endotracheal aspirate
- HAP
Hospital-acquired pneumonia
- ICU
Intensive care unit
- MDR
Multidrug resistant
- PSB
Protected specimen brush
- PTC
Protected (plugged) telescoping catheter
- SAPS
Simplified Acute Physiology Score
- SOFA
Sequential organ failure assessment
- TMP-SMX
Trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole
- VAP
Ventilator-associated pneumonia
Authors’ contributions
PG, HB, and AB contributed to the study design, screening for eligibility and inclusion of patients, data analysis, writing of the first draft and of the final version, and review of the manuscript. NM contributed to the screening for eligibility and inclusion of patients, data analysis, writing of the first draft and of the final version, and review of the manuscript. DH contributed to the writing of the first draft and of the final version, data analysis, and review of the manuscript. SL and EN contributed to the screening for eligibility and inclusion of patients, writing of the last draft, and review of the manuscript. MM, JG, CC, GL, PT, CD, AK, TG, JP, and J-ML contributed to the screening for eligibility and inclusion of patients and review of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Funding
This study has been solely funded by the Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine of the University Hospital of Nancy, France. The Unit of Methodology, Data and Statistics kindly provided free of charge RedCap support.
Availability of data and materials
The datasets analyzed in this study are not publicly available due to privacy issues, but are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
This study was approved by the ethics committee of the Société Française d’Anesthésie et de Réanimation (IRB 00010254-2015-010; February 19, 2016). This study was the subject of a favorable decision from the Comité consultatif sur le traitement de l’information en matière de recherche dans le domaine de la santé on April 20, 2017, and of a declaration to the Comission Nationale Informatique et Libertés on May 20, 2017.
This study complies with the principles of the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki in reviewing and publishing information from the patient’s medical records. The requirement for informed consent from each patient was waived because the design of study was retrospective in nature and because of the use of anonymized patient and hospital data.
Consent for publication
All the authors have read the manuscript, approved this submission, and consented for publication.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Footnotes
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Contributor Information
Adrien Bouglé, Phone: 00 (33) 1 42 26 29 91, Email: adrien.bougle@aphp.fr.
AZUREA research network, Email: secretariat@azurea.org.
AZUREA research network:
Jean-Michel Constantin, Thomas Godet, Philippe Guerci, Sebastien Perbet, and Stanislas Ledochowski
Supplementary information
Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10.1186/s13054-019-2649-5.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The datasets analyzed in this study are not publicly available due to privacy issues, but are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.