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Taylor and Francis Group, Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 11-12(38), p. 995-1000

DOI: 10.1080/00365540600868321

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Shaked H, Carmeli Y, Schwartz D, Siegman-Igra Y. Enterococcal bacteremia: epidemiological, microbiological, clinical and prognostic characteristics, and the impact of high level gentamicin resistance

Journal article published in 2006 by Hila Shaked, Yehuda Carmeli, David Schwartz, Yardena Siegman-Igra
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Enterococci are increasingly common nosocomial pathogens that can cause serious infections and often acquire antibiotic resistance. This study focused on the epidemiological, microbiological and clinical characteristics of enterococcal bacteraemia with special attention to the impact of high level gentamicin resistance (HLGR) on prognosis. 117 cases of enterococcal bacteraemia constituted 8% of all bacteraemic episodes during the y 2002. The most common source of infection was the urinary tract, more than half of the episodes were polymicrobial and the vast majority of cases was healthcare-associated. 50 of 117 isolates (43%) were resistant to gentamicin. Infection-related mortality (22 of 117, 19%) was associated with 2 independent variables in multivariate analysis: severity-of-illness score (OR=39.6, p<0.00001) and HLGR (OR=6.4, p=0.006). It was concluded that HLGR adversely affects the outcome of bacteraemic enterococcal infection.