387892

Incidence of Co-infection and its Impact on COVID-19 Patients admitted in the Intensive Care Unit

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Last updated: 05 Jan 2025

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Abstract

Background
Viral-bacterial co-infections are one of the most serious medical issues, with higher fatality rates. Few investigations have studied bacterial superinfections in individuals with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Hence, we carried out the current research to assess the different types of secondary bacterial and fungal infections and their response to antibiotics and antifungals that affect COVID-19 patients’ outcomes when admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).
Methods
A total of 65 COVID-19 patients admitted to the ICU were studied in this cross-sectional study. Endotracheal aspirate or sputum samples and blood samples were collected using strict infection control procedures. The bacterial isolates were identified using gram staining, growth characteristics, and standard biochemical reactions with antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Fungal infections were determined by serological assays.
Results
The incidence of bacterial co-infection was 47.7%. Death was significantly higher among COVID-19 patients with secondary infection (P < 0.001). The clinical isolates were 34, of which 31 (91.18%) were bacteria and 3 (8.82%) were fungi. Klebsiella pneumonia and Acinetobacter baumannii were the predominant gram-negative bacteria; representing 38% and 17.65%, respectively. Staphylococcus aureus was the predominant isolated gram-positive bacteria represented 11.76%. Candida albicans were the predominantly isolated fungi. Tigecycline and amikacin were the most sensitive antibiotics for associated bacterial co-infection of COVID-19 cases (80.6% and 70.9%, respectively). Flucytosine, amphotericin B, caspofungin, and micafungin were all found to be sensitive against candida Albicans isolates.
Conclusions
Mortality was significantly higher among COVID-19 patients with secondary bacterial and fungal co-infection. Klebsiella pneumonia and Acinetobacter baumannii were the most common co-infecting agents. Tigecycline and amikacin displayed the highest sensitivity patterns.

DOI

TEJA-2022-0254

Keywords

Covid‐19, co-infection, antibiotic, ICU

Authors

First Name

Aiman

Last Name

Touny

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First Name

Fatma

Last Name

Rageh

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First Name

Eman

Last Name

Riad

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First Name

Mohamed A.

Last Name

Sakr

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First Name

Shaymaa Abdelraheem

Last Name

Abdelhady

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First Name

Rasha

Last Name

Elgamal

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First Name

Samar S.

Last Name

Ahmed

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First Name

Shimaa A.

Last Name

Al-Touny

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Volume

39

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

51163

Issue Date

2023-12-01

Receive Date

2022-12-17

Publish Date

2023-12-31

Page Start

141

Page End

148

Print ISSN

1110-1849

Online ISSN

1687-1804

Link

https://egja.journals.ekb.eg/article_387892.html

Detail API

https://egja.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=387892

Order

387,892

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Journal of Anaesthesia

Publication Link

https://egja.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Incidence of Co-infection and its Impact on COVID-19 Patients admitted in the Intensive Care Unit

Details

Type

Article

Created At

21 Dec 2024