- Tamma, Pranita D;
- Komarow, Lauren;
- Ge, Lizhao;
- Garcia-Diaz, Julia;
- Herc, Erica S;
- Doi, Yohei;
- Arias, Cesar A;
- Albin, Owen;
- Saade, Elie;
- Miller, Loren G;
- Jacob, Jesse T;
- Satlin, Michael J;
- Krsak, Martin;
- Huskins, W Charles;
- Dhar, Sorabh;
- Shelburne, Samuel A;
- Hill, Carol;
- Baum, Keri R;
- Bhojani, Minal;
- Greenwood-Quaintance, Kerryl E;
- Schmidt-Malan, Suzannah M;
- Patel, Robin;
- Evans, Scott R;
- Chambers, Henry F;
- Fowler, Vance G;
- van Duin, David;
- Group, for the Antibacterial Resistance Leadership
Background
Ceftriaxone-resistant (CRO-R) Escherichia coli bloodstream infections (BSIs) are common.Methods
This is a prospective cohort of patients with E coli BSI at 14 United States hospitals between November 2020 and April 2021. For each patient with a CRO-R E coli BSI enrolled, the next consecutive patient with a ceftriaxone-susceptible (CRO-S) E coli BSI was included. Primary outcome was desirability of outcome ranking (DOOR) at day 30, with 50% probability of worse outcomes in the CRO-R group as the null hypothesis. Inverse probability weighting (IPW) was used to reduce confounding.Results
Notable differences between patients infected with CRO-R and CRO-S E coli BSI included the proportion with Pitt bacteremia score ≥4 (23% vs 15%, P = .079) and the median time to active antibiotic therapy (12 hours [interquartile range {IQR}, 1-35 hours] vs 1 hour [IQR, 0-6 hours]; P < .001). Unadjusted DOOR analyses indicated a 58% probability (95% confidence interval [CI], 52%-63%) for a worse clinical outcome in CRO-R versus CRO-S BSI. In the IPW-adjusted cohort, no difference was observed (54% [95% CI, 47%-61%]). Secondary outcomes included unadjusted and adjusted differences in the proportion of 30-day mortality between CRO-R and CRO-S BSIs (-5.3% [95% CI, -10.3% to -.4%] and -1.8 [95% CI, -6.7% to 3.2%], respectively), postculture median length of stay (8 days [IQR, 5-13 days] vs 6 days [IQR, 4-9 days]; P < .001), and incident admission to a long-term care facility (22% vs 12%, P = .045).Conclusions
Patients with CRO-R E coli BSI generally have poorer outcomes compared to patients infected with CRO-S E coli BSI, even after adjusting for important confounders.