Litcius/Paper detail

Antimicrobial Treatment of Serratia marcescens Invasive Infections: Systematic Review

Radica Živković Zarić, Milan Zarić, Marija Sekulić, Nenad Zornić, Jelena Nešić, Vesna Rosic, Tatjana Vulović, Marko Spasić, M. Vuleta, Jovan Jovanović, Dalibor Jovanović, Stefan Jakovljević, Petar Čanović

2023Antibiotics71 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Serratia marcescens (SM) is a Gram-negative pathogen discovered by Italian pharmacist, Bizio, in 1819. According to the literature, S. marcescens is resistant to a wide range of antibiotics, including penicillin, cephalosporin, tetracycline, macrolide, nitrofurantoin, and colistin. We conducted a systematic review of published reports, determined what invasive infections could cause SM, and established the most appropriate antibiotic therapy. Methods: We registered this systematic review on the PROSPERO registry of systematic reviews–meta-analyses before we started our research (registration number CRD42022323159). The online searches of published studies were implemented via MEDLINE, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, EBSCO, Scopus, Google Scholar, SCIndex, and the registry of clinical studies of human participants (ClinicalTrials.gov). Results: Our study included 32 published articles (9 case series and 23 case reports). There were 57 individual cases, respectively. The oldest patient was 97 years and the youngest patient was a newborn. S. marcescens was, in most cases, isolated from blood followed by urine and cerebrospinal fluid. In most cases, sensitivity was tested to cotrimoxazole (from 27 isolates, 10 showed resistance) followed by gentamicin (from 26 isolates, 3 showed resistance) as well as amikacin (from 21 isolates, none showed resistance). Patients died from an infection in 21 cases (31%). Conclusions: Treatment of SM infections should include carbapenems or aminoglycosides in combination with third-generation (and eventually fourth-generation) cephalosporin. Cotrimoxazole should be considered in cases of uncomplicated urinary infections.

Topics & Concepts

Serratia marcescensAntimicrobialMicrobiologyMedicineSerratiaIntensive care medicineBiologyBacteriaEscherichia coliPseudomonasBiochemistryGeneGeneticsAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaAntibiotics Pharmacokinetics and EfficacyBacterial Identification and Susceptibility Testing
Antimicrobial Treatment of Serratia marcescens Invasive Infections: Systematic Review | Litcius