Epidemiology, microbiological, clinical characteristics, and outcome of Burkholderia cepacia complex infections in non-cystic fibrosis adult patients from Qatar
Tawheeda Ibrahim, Tasneem Abdallah, Ahmed Abdallah, Rabia Qazi, Abeir Alimam, Hashim Mohammad, Faiha Eltayeb, Joanne Daghfal, Maisa Ali, Hamad Abdel Hadi
Abstract
Objectives: complex (Bcc) infections in non-cystic fibrosis (CF) patients from Qatar. Methods: A retrospective study was conducted on adult patients across all hospitals at Hamad Medical Corporation between January 2012 and December 2018 to evaluate clinically relevant Bcc in non-CF adult patients. Results: species infections were recorded, 64 were secondary to Bcc primarily affecting males (78.12%) with a mean age of 53 years, from the Middle and Southeastern region (92.2%) affected predominantly by diabetes mellitus (34.4%), chronic kidney (23.4%), coronary heart (20.3%), and hypertensive diseases (17.2%) while recent hospitalization and admission to critical care were evident in 45.3% and 93.8% of cases, respectively. Main infection sites were urinary (43.8%) and respiratory (29.7%) with associated bacteremia recorded in 26.6% of cases. Microbiological characteristics demonstrated high-level resistance profiles leading to delayed microbiological clearance in case of bacteremia (61%) and management with multiple therapeutic agents (range 4-6) resulting in disease resolution in 90.6% of cases with observed 30-day mortality of 7.8%. Conclusions: infections are infrequent, recorded mainly in middle-aged males with chronic comorbidities presenting as urinary, respiratory, and bacteremia associated with hospitalization, admission to critical care, and invasive procedures. High-level antimicrobial resistance is observed necessitating multiple therapeutic agents and suboptimal bacteriological clearance.