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Relationship Between COVID-19 Lockdown and Epidemiology of Neonatal Sepsis

Sourabh Dutta, Praveen Kumar, Rajarajan Paulpandian, Shiv Sajan Saini, Priya Sreenivasan, Kanya Mukhopadhyay, Venkataseshan Sundaram, Jogender Kumar, Pallab Ray

2022The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We compared the hospital-based epidemiology of neonatal sepsis after the coronavirus disease 2019 lockdown (LD) versus historical epochs and the LD period versus phases of unlocking. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study was conducted in a level 3 neonatal unit. We compared neonates born in three 24-week periods-Group LD: 22 March 2020 to 5 September 2020-the reference group, Group pre-LD: 29 September 2019 to 14 March 2020 and Group temporally corresponding to LD in 2019 (corres-LD): 24 March 2019 to 7 September 2019. We also studied linear trends from LD phase 1.0 until Unlock 4.0. The key outcome was culture-positive sepsis. RESULTS: There were 1622, 2744 and 2700 subjects in groups LD, pre-LD and corres-LD, respectively. The incidence of any culture-positive sepsis in pre-LD was higher than LD [odds ratio (95% CI) = 1.61 (1.02-2.56)]. This was mainly due to a statistically significant reduction in Acinetobacter baumannii sepsis, with incidence rate differences of pre-LD versus LD [0.67 (95% CI: 0.37-0.97), P = 0.0001] and corres-LD versus LD [0.40 (95% CI: 0.16-0.64), P = 0.0024]. Groups pre-LD and corres-LD had higher proportion of multi-drug resistant (MDR)/extreme drug resistance/pan drug resistance sepsis than LD [77%, 77% and 44%, respectively (P values of both groups vs. LD = 0.01)]. From LD 1.0 to unlock 4.0, there were fewer episodes of MDR sepsis (Plinear trends = 0.047). On multivariable analysis, group pre-LD (vs. reference group LD), male sex, birth weight and Apgar score independently predicted culture-positive sepsis. CONCLUSIONS: LD favorably impacted the epidemiology of neonatal sepsis in a hospital setting, with less A. baumannii and MDR sepsis, which persisted during unlocking.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineEpidemiologyNeonatal sepsisIntensive care medicineSepsisPediatricsIncidence (geometry)Neonatal infectionEmergency medicineMEDLINEPandemicNeonatal deathNeonatal mortalityCOVID-19 Impact on ReproductionNeonatal and Maternal InfectionsCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies