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Sepsis C604 1-28-2015 Bryan H. Schmitt D.O. E-mail: [email protected] Robbins sections for review • Systemic effects of inflammation (Chapter 3): 99-100 • Shock (Chapter 4): 131-134 CLINICAL AND PATHOLOGIC ASPECTS OF BLOOD STREAM INFECTIONS Bacteremia = presence of bacteria in blood Clinical patterns of bacteremia • Transient • Intermittent • Continuous Fungemia, candidemia, viremia, parasitemia etc. Old terms • Septicemia = bacteremia and clinical manifestations of infection • “Blood poisoning” Sepsis Definitions: • Sepsis Implies presence of pathogenic microorganisms in the bloodstream (usually bacteremia) with signs and symptoms of infection, such as fever, chills, and tachycardia • Septic shock Indicates the presence of hypotension with sepsis • Severe sepsis Characterized by septic shock with organ system failure (or dysfunction) -- associated with 20% to > 50% mortality SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE SYNDROME (SIRS)* • Not all patients who appear to have sepsis are infected • Manifestations same as for sepsis • Non-infectious causes include: pancreatitis, ischemia, multiple trauma and tissue injury, administration of tumor necrosis factor & other mediators of inflammation. • When due to infection, the terms sepsis & SIRS are synonymous. (*Bone et al., 1998. Definitions for sepsis and organ failure. Chest. 101:1644-1655 [consensus conference recommendations]; see also Mandel et al 2005, p 906) Sepsis/SIRS Bacteremia Other SIRS Infection Fungal Trauma Sepsis Parasit. Vir. Other Burns Pancreatitis *Severe Sepsis/SIRS includes some evidence of organ failure Septic shock • • • • • • Overwhelming Systemic infection “ENDOTOXINS”, i.e., LPS (Usually Gram-) Gram+ (Listeria) FUNGAL Viral (rarely) “SUPERANTIGENS”, (Superantigens are polyclonal Tlymphocyte activators that induce systemic inflammatory cytokine cascades; “toxic shock” superantigens by S. aureus are the prime example.) ENDOTOXINS • Usually Gram(-) Rods • Major component of cell membrane • Also called “LPS”, because they are Lipo-Poly- Saccharides • Elicits strong immune response, LIPID-A is major component involved • Enters bloodstream through secretion and through destruction of cell membrane FACTORS THAT MEDIATE THE SEPSIS SYNDROME Microbial factors (e.g., endotoxin or lipopolysaccharide of GNR’s; peptidoglycan of GPC cell walls, toxins, fungal antigens and others) Chemical mediators of inflammation and other host factors (Robbins, Chap. 2) - Examples: • Cytokines – Tumor necrosis factor (TNF-) in particular – Interleukin (IL)-1; IL-6, IL-12 • Chemokines – IL-8 – Macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1 • Lipid mediators – Prostaglandins – Leukotrienes SEPTIC shock events (linear sequence) • SYSTEMIC VASODILATION (hypotension) • ↓ MYOCARDIAL CONTRACTILITY • • • • • DIFFUSE ENDOTHELIAL ACTIVATION LEUKOCYTE ADHESION ALVEOLAR DAMAGE (ARDS) DIC VITAL ORGAN FAILURE CNS MULTIPLE ORGAN DYSFUNCTION SYNDROME (MODS) Organ failure or dysfunction, a frequent complication of SIRS (occurs in ~ 30% of patients with sepsis). Manifestations may include: Brain: Confusion, delirium, stupor, coma Heart: Depressed myocardial contractility; heart compensates by dilating and beating faster to increase output; Actual cardiac output drops Clotting: Endothelium damaged with widespread microvascular thromboses, or disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). (Consumption of platelets and clotting factors). Lungs: Pulmonary congestion and edema (acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) “shock lung” Acute pulmonary edema (& congestion) in a patient with ARDS who died of sepsis. Acute pulmonary edema in a patient with ARDS who died of sepsis. H&E of lung of patient with ARDS who died of sepsis. Note diffuse alveolar damage with hyaline membranes -- Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (Continued) Kidney: Liver: G.I.tract: Endocrine Skin lesions: Acute renal failure (acute tubular necrosis) Bile stasis, focal necrosis and jaundice Hemorrhagic necrosis of mucosa probably due to ischemia (at least in part) poor perfusion, clot formation. Stress hormones (eg. cortisol, catecholamines, glucagon circulate at high levels) Petechiae, purpura Kidney with acute, tubular necrosis (H&E) Liver with acute passive congestion Small intestine with full-thickness necrosis Waterhouse-Friderichsen Syndrome SOURCES OF ORGANISMS IN BACTEREMIA • Most common sources – IV catheters 25% – Genitourinary tract (UTI) 25% – Respiratory tract (pnemonia) 20% – Intraabdominal foci 10% • Source not apparent in 20-25% of patients Microorganisms in Bacteremia • ≥ 660,000 episodes of bacteremia in US/year • ~ 10% of all blood cultures drawn in many hospitals are positive • Gram-positive bacteria in 52% of cases • Gram-negative bacteria in 38% of cases • Fungi in ~ 5% of cases (mostly Candida species) • Frequency of anaerobes declined in 1990’s to ~ 1% but increased slightly recently • ~ 5% of bloodstream infections are polymicrobial Refs: Martin 2003. NEJM 348:1546, & Llewelyn 2007. CID 44:1343 ORGANISMS COMMONLY INVOLVED IN BACTERMIA: OUR EXPERIENCE • Staphylococci including MRSA; we are also seeing increasing frequency of enterococci and streptococci • Gram- negative rods; esp. E.coli, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas, and Enterobacter – Serratia • Anaerobes: esp. species of Bacteroides fragilis group • Fungemia: Candida most common Bacterial Blood Isolates Eskenazi 2011 (1609) • GNRs 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. E. coli (98) K. pneumoniae (51) P. aeruginosa (35) E. cloacae (24) P. mirabilis (18) K. oxytoca (18) • GPCs 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. CNS (619) S. aureus (135) MRSA (158) E. faecalis (76) Corynebacterium. (44) S. pneumoniae (25) S. agalactiae (19) Yeast Isolates Eskenazi 2009 (75) 1. 2. 3. 4. Candida albicans (40) Candida glabrata (37) Candida tropicalis (9) Cryptococcus neoformans (7) Blood Culture Time to Detection ( 569 positives in 2011 ) • • • • • 24 hours (503) 48 hours (36) 72 hours (20) 96 hours (5) 120 hours (5) 88 % positive on Day 1 2 % positive on Day 4/5 Common “Contaminants” • • • • • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. CNS (coagulase negative staphylococci) Propionibacterium Corynebacterium Bacillus alpha-hemolytic streptococci COMMON “CONTAMINANTS” Coagulase-negative staphylococci , Propionibacterium acnes, Corynebacterium spp., and Bacillus spp. • In general, single cultures positive for these bacteria represent contamination. **one blood culture is one venipuncture** • Mutiple, separate cultures growing one of these isolates are more likely to indicate clinically significant bacteremia. • But, all contaminants are capable of causing disease; coag- neg. staphylococci especially important in patients with indwelling vascular and CNS catheters *And neonates PROGNOSIS IN PATIENTS WITH BACTERMIA • Higher mortality for Pseudomonas or fungal sepsis than for E. coli or Klebsiella infections • Mortality 25 – 50% with aerobic Gram-negative rods • Gram-positive bacteria; fewer mortalities with certain exceptions (VRE, MRSA) • Mortality 25 – 50% in Bacteroides bacteremia • C. septicum bacteremia; >50% mortality reported but (underlying malignancy often present [e.g., colon ca.]) • Fungi; rates of fungemia increasing; mortality with Candida is high PATHOGENESIS • Most bacteremic infections are endogenous • Patients at higher risk for bacteremia – Neonates – Older individuals – Patients with malignancy and/or neutropenia; antibiotic Rx may predispose to GPC’s; fungemia – Intravenous drug abusers – AIDS patients, and patients with: – Liver or splenic dysfunction – Transplant; immunosuppressive Rx – Intensive care units; long-term care facilities – Foreign bodies; instrumentation; various kinds of catheters ICU patient with intravascular & urinary catheters Hand-washing: most important in prevention of nosocomial infections DIAGNOSIS OF BACTEREMIA Diagnostic importance of blood cultures – High mortality if patient untreated or inappropriate antibiotics – Blood cultures needed to establish an etiology – Obtain pathogen for identification, antimicrobial susceptibility testing, optimization of antimicrobial therapy Recommendations/Indications • Draw blood cultures before antibiotics are administered • • • • Fever >38 C Or hypothermia (<36 C) Leukocytosis (>10,000 WBC) Granulocytopenia (<1000 neutrophils) Timing of Blood Cultures • Just before fever spike is best • At fever spike is 2nd best • Peripheral vein if possible- heparin is inhibitory and “lines” are colonized • Draw at least 1 hour apart if possible What is a Blood Culture? • Blood obtained from a SINGLE VENIPUNCTURE and inoculated into media • 1 bottle, 2 bottles or multiple bottles/plates etc. • 1 venipuncture = 1 blood culture Bactec 9240 Blood Culture Instrument Door Opened -- Bottles in Incubator/Fluorescence Detection System Blood Culture Media • Example: BACTEC FX System • Bacteria present metabolize nutrients and produce carbon dioxide • A sensor dye in the bottle reacts with CO2 • BACTEC photodetectors measure fluorescence • Measurements occur every 10 minutes • Detection in 5 days or less Some Technical Variables Affecting Blood Cultures • Resins in broth bind antibiotics & can increase detection of some microorganisms. • Agitation of media (during incubation) increases yield & speed of detection • Anticoagulant: sodium polyanetholsulfonate (SPS) in media -- SPS interferes with phagocytosis, inhibits complement & lysozyme, inactivates aminoglycosides, & inhibits N. gonorrhoeae, & P. anerobius Resins • At IU Hospital the introduction of resins resulted in 18 % increased recovery of isolates receiving antibiotics • There is a similar increase in recovery for patients not on antibiotics Most Common Blood Culture Adult Aerobic Adult Lytic Contamination is Controlled by Proper Skin Antisepsis Before Venipuncture. Skin Preparation -Scrub with 70% alcohol, then 1-2% tincture of iodine Venipuncture -Gloves must be sterile when vein palpated VOLUME OF BLOOD CULTURED This is the single most important variable in recovering microorganisms from blood of bacteremic or fungemic patients! • Adults: 20 - 30 ml optimal • Infants and small children; > 1 ml needed NUMBER OF BLOOD CULTURES Not more than 2 to 3 per 24 hours! Of cases ultimately proven to have positive cultures: • 80% positive with the 1st set • 89% with the 2nd set • 99% positive with the 3rd Number of Blood Cultures • 2 or 3 blood cultures per 24-hour period separated by time • If endocarditis or severe sepsis suspected- do 2 or 3 blood cultures (venipunctures) immediately and start antibiotics SPECIAL Blood Culture PROCEDURES REQUIRED: EXAMPLES • • • • • • • Brucellosis Leptospirosis Tularemia (Francisella tularensis) Nutritionally variant streptococci Cell wall deficient forms Cat scratch disease (Bartonella henselae) Mycobacterium spp. PATHOGENESIS OF INFECTIVE ENDOCARDITIS • Bacteremia a prerequisite - e.g., from gut, oropharynx, or skin; or dental/surgical procedures, IV drug abuse, catheters • Factors associated with I.E. include mitral valve prolapse, or congenital heart disease; rheumatic heart disease is now less common than in past. • Prosthetic heart valves are prominent predisposing factors. INFECTIVE ENDOCARDITIS • Colonization of heart valves with bacteria, fungi, rickettsia, chlamydia or possibly viruses with • Formation of friable, infected vegetations leading to valve injury • Two types: • Acute - highly virulent organisms, e.g., S. aureus • previously normal valve; acute onset; >50% die • Subacute - organisms of low virulence, e.g. viridans strep, enterococci, GNRs, anaerobes, GPRs, fungi • slower onset, diffuse clinical findings, fewer die MORPHOLOGIC FINDINGS • Acute infective endocarditis - leaflet perforation; myocardial abscess • Above findings rare with subacute infective endocarditis • With IV drug abuse, vegetations often acute and on right-sided heart valves • Morphologic findings in body sites other than heart: • Janeway lesions, Osler nodes, Roth spots, splinter hemorrhages Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis involving mitral valve Staphylococci in Gram-Stained Smear DIAGNOSIS OF INFECTIVE ENDOCARDITIS AND OUTCOME • Clinical diagnosis confirmed by blood cultures – 3 sets of blood cultures per 24 hrs should suffice – 20-30 ml of blood per draw (i.e., per blood culture set) • Blood cultures should be positive in > 95% of cases if the recommendations followed. • Antimicrobial treatment aided by I.D. & susceptibility testing of specific microorganism involved • Five-year survival with early diagnosis and appropriate Rx = 50% - 90%. POSITIVE BLOOD CULTURES: Processing Positive Bottles • • • • Visual inspection of bottles Gram-stain Other stains (e.g., Acridine Orange) Preliminary results called to clinician ( Gram+ coccus vs Gram – rod) • Subculture onto aerobic & anaerobic solid plating media • Rapid susceptibility testing & identification • Molecular methods (e.g., peptide nucleic acidfluorescence in-situ hybridization (PNA-FISH) for GPCs and yeast; RT-PCR for MRSA; and others Current Laboratory Detection Methods of BSIs Blood Draw from Patient After 12-14 h incubation (24-48 h from time of draw), bacteria grow, lab begins ID Incubation on Blood Culture Monitoring System (6-18 h) After 2-24 h (48 h total) ID is reported to physician via chart Slide from Dr. Nate Ledeboer, MCW/DynaCare/Milwakee, WI Notify ordering physician of positive culture and plate for ID and susceptibility 48-72 h from time of draw, full ID and susceptibility reported to physician PNA probes target ribosomal RNA inside cells PNA FISH = Peptide Nucleic Acid Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization PN1870A S. aureus/CNS PNA FISH S. aureus S. aureus CNS C-N S Non-staphylococci C. albicans (green), C. tropicalis (yellow); C glabrata/krusei (red) Gram-Positive BSI Rapid Diagnostic Tests FDA Cleared Tests: AdvanDx (PNA FISH): S. aureus/CNS, E. faecalis/OE Nanosphere’s Gram-Positive Blood Culture Test (BC-GP) BioFire/Film Array GP/GR/Yeast blood culture test Verigene Gram-Positive Blood Culture Nucleic Acid Test (BC-GP) Staphylococcus aureus Staphylococcus epidermidis Staphylococcus lugdunensis Staphylococcus spp. Genus Streptococcus spp. Listeria spp. mecA Resistance vanA vanB Species Streptococcus pneumoniae Streptococcus anginosus Group Streptococcus agalactiae (GBS) Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS) Enterococcus faecalis Enterococcus faecium Gram-Negative BSI Rapid Diagnostics Tests FDA Cleared Tests: AdvanDx (E. coli/P. aeruginosa, GNR Traffic Light) Tests in Development: Nanosphere Verigene BC-GN, BioFire BCID Verigene Gram-Negative Blood Culture Nucleic Acid Test (BC-GN)—In Development Genus Acinetobacter spp. Escherichia coli Proteus spp. Klebsiella pneumoniae Citrobacter spp. Enterobacter spp. KPC NDM Resistanc e CTX-M VIM IMP OXA Specie s Klebsiella oxytoca Pseudomonas aeruginosa Serratia marcescens EFFECTS ON HEALTH CARE COST (Rapid BC IDs Available 24/7) Hospitalization cost reduction of $19,547/patient Estimated cost savings of ~ $18 million annually theoretical 64 Perez KK, et al. Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2012 • • • • Issues 1. Molecular Testing is expensive but rapid 2. Lab cost go up (thousands) 3. Overall, patient cost go down (millions) 4. Length of Stay, morbidity and mortality go down • 5. The “system” saves money (millions) and patient outcomes improve • 6. “Silos” must come down: it is one lab and it is one health care delivery system • 7. Thousands spent in the lab budget can save millions for the hospital system