- Levin, Laura E;
- Shayegan, Leila H;
- Lucky, Anne W;
- Hook, Kristen P;
- Bruckner, Anna L;
- Feinstein, James A;
- Whittier, Susan;
- Lauren, Christine T;
- Pope, Elena;
- Lara‐Corrales, Irene;
- Wiss, Karen;
- McCuaig, Catherine C;
- Powell, Julie;
- Eichenfield, Lawrence F;
- Levy, Moise L;
- Diaz, Lucia;
- Glick, Sharon A;
- Paller, Amy S;
- Price, Harper N;
- Browning, John C;
- Morel, Kimberly D
Background/objectives
Patients with epidermolysis bullosa (EB) require care of wounds that are colonized or infected with bacteria. A subset of EB patients are at risk for squamous cell carcinoma, and bacterial-host interactions have been considered in this risk. The EB Clinical Characterization and Outcomes Database serves as a repository of information from EB patients at multiple centers in the United States and Canada. Access to this resource enabled broad-scale analysis of wound cultures.Methods
A retrospective analysis of 739 wound cultures from 158 patients from 13 centers between 2001 and 2018.Results
Of 152 patients with a positive culture, Staphylococcus aureus (SA) was recovered from 131 patients (86%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) from 56 (37%), and Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS) from 34 (22%). Sixty-eight percent of patients had cultures positive for methicillin-sensitive SA, and 47%, methicillin-resistant SA (18 patients had cultures that grew both methicillin-susceptible and methicillin-resistant SA at different points in time). Of 15 patients with SA-positive cultures with recorded mupirocin susceptibility testing, 11 had mupirocin-susceptible SA and 6 patients mupirocin-resistant SA (2 patients grew both mupirocin-susceptible and mupirocin-resistant SA). SCC was reported in 23 patients in the entire database, of whom 10 had documented wound cultures positive for SA, PA, and Proteus species in 90%, 50%, and 20% of cases, respectively.Conclusions
SA and PA were the most commonly isolated bacteria from wounds. Methicillin resistance and mupirocin resistance were reported in 47% and 40% of patients tested, respectively, highlighting the importance of ongoing antimicrobial strategies to limit antibiotic resistance.