key: cord-0841545-2te3x60f authors: d’Humières, Camille; Patrier, Juliette; Lortat-Jacob, Brice; Tran-dinh, Alexy; Chemali, Lotfi; Maataoui, Naouale; Rondinaud, Emilie; Ruppé, Etienne; Burdet, Charles; Ruckly, Stéphane; Montravers, Philippe; Timsit, Jean-François; Armand-Lefevre, Laurence title: Two original observations concerning bacterial infections in COVID-19 patients hospitalized in intensive care units during the first wave of the epidemic in France date: 2021-04-29 journal: PLoS One DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250728 sha: 5c531c3aa090b492fbb53fd124201df614443d95 doc_id: 841545 cord_uid: 2te3x60f Among 197 COVID-19 patients hospitalized in ICU, 88 (44.7%) experienced at least one bacterial infection, with pneumonia (39.1%) and bloodstream infections (15,7%) being the most frequent. Unusual findings include frequent suspicion of bacterial translocations originating from the digestive tract as well as bacterial persistence in the lungs despite adequate therapy. Since December 2019, the world has been facing a pandemic due to the spread of SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, which may lead to acute respiratory failure. In 6% of cases, patients are hospitalized [1] , and 20% of whom develop acute respiratory distress syndrome for which they are admitted to intensive care unit (ICU) [1] . Hospitalization in ICU is highly associated with health-care infections, particularly ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and bloodstream infections (BSI). In France, the first COVID-19 patients, all from Wuhan (China), were hospitalized at the end of January 2020 [2] . One of them, admitted to the medical ICU of our hospital, was surprisingly co-infected upon arrival with an unexpected antibiotic susceptible Acinetobacter baumannii. Two meta-analyses reported bacterial infection rates in COVID-19 ICU patients of 8.1% [3] and 14% [4] . But data on bacterial infections in COVID-19 patients are still sparse and not always consistent. Moreover, several studies highlight the over-prescription of antibiotics in COVID-19 patients and the risk of a global increase of antimicrobial resistance [5, 6] . It is thus essential to know the incidence and epidemiology of bacterial infections in such patients, in order to manage antibiotic prescriptions. Our study describes bacterial infections in COVID-19 patients hospitalized in two ICUs of a French referral center hospital. This retrospective study was conducted on COVID-19 patients hospitalized in ICUs of Bichat Claude Bernard University Hospital (Paris, France) between January 29 th (first patient admission) and May 31 st 2020. Demographic data, comorbidities and microbiological data have been retrospectively collected. A COVID-19 confirmed case was defined by a positive result for SARS-CoV-2 virus, based on a reverse transcriptase-polymerase-chain-reaction (RT-PCR) test on a nasopharyngeal swab or respiratory specimen and/or typical parenchyma infiltrates on a chest CT scan. Bacterial pneumonia was diagnosed according to clinical IDSA guidelines [7] and the presence of bacteria in a respiratory sample (broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL), plugged telescoping catheter (PTC), tracheal aspiration or sputum). A bacterial infection was considered as coinfection when the bacteria and the SARS-cov-2 were detected concomitantly at hospital admission and as super-infection when the bacteria was detected > 2 days after admission for COVID-19. A BSI was defined by the presence of bacteria in blood cultures (BACTEC-FX, Becton-Dickinson) that was not considered contaminant and led to antibiotic initiation or modification. Early-and late-onset VAP or BSI were established using a breakpoint of 5 days of mechanical ventilation for VAP and of ICU stay for BSI [8] . The Committee for Research Ethics in Anesthesia and Critical care (CERAR) authorized the study (IRB 00010254-2020-168). For univariate analysis, categorical data were analyzed using Pearson's chi-squared analysis or Fisher test, and continuous data were analyzed using non-parametric Wilcoxon test. All statistical analyses were 2-tailed with a significance level of 5%, and were performed with scipy.stat package from Python. Overall, 197 COVID-19 patients were admitted to ICU. Median age was 59 years (IQR 50-68) and sex ratio (M/F) was 3. At admission the median SAPS II was 34 (IQR 25-50). Among patients, 116 (58.9%) had at least one co-morbidity and 81 (41.1%) were overweight (body mass index (BMI) � 25 kg/m 2 ). In all, 179 patients (91.0%) received antibiotics (122/179 introduced before ICU and 57/179 during ICU stay) (S1 Table) . Almost half of patients (88/197, 44.7%) had at least one bacterial infection during their ICU stay; 77 (39.1%) had pneumonia, 31 (15.7%) BSI, 4 (2.0%) urinary tract infection and 1 a surgical site infection (S1 Table) . Patients with bacterial infections were more severe at ICU admission than patients without (SAPS II 45 vs 30, p<0.001, intubation rate 92.0% vs 44.0%, p<0.001, respectively). Patients with bacterial infections had a longer ICU stay (17 days vs 5, p<0.001) and a higher mortality rate in ICU (51.1% vs 23.9%, p<0.001). Of the 197 COVID-19 patients, 66 (33,5%) had at least one positive blood culture, among which 31 (15,7%) had BSI ( Table 1 ). The remaining cases were considered to have contaminated blood cultures, predominantly with coagulase negative staphylococci (95%). Patients with BSI had higher BMIs (30 vs 28, p = 0.007), were more severe at ICU admission (SAPS II 44 vs 33, p = 0.007) and during ICU stay (intubation rate 100% vs 59%, p<0.001, mortality rate 61.3% vs 31.1%, p = 0.003) ( Table 1) . Among the BSI, all were super-infections, and 83.9% (26/31) were late-onset. Gram-positive cocci were prominent in BSI with 35.5% Enterococci (11/31) and 32.2% Staphylococci (10/31). Enterobacterales were only detected in 4 episodes (4/31, 12.9%) ( Table 1, S2 Table) . In 38.7% (12/31) of episodes, the origin of the bacteremia was identified: 5 from the lungs and 7 from catheter ( Table 1 ) with positive respiratory sample or catheter tip culture. Of the 19 episodes without proven origin, 17 (17/31, 54.8%) were considered to originate from a digestive or oro-pharyngeal translocation. Indeed, the isolated bacterial species are known to belong to the digestive or oropharyngeal microbiota and all other potential sources were excluded (Table 1 ). Among the 197 ICU COVID-19 patients, 77 (39.1%) had at least one bacterial pneumonia. Inaugural episodes were: 5 community-acquired pneumonia (6.5%), 7 non-ventilated hospital acquired pneumonia (9.1%) and 65 VAP (84.4%). This represents 5/77 (6.5%) pneumonia coinfections (present since admission) and 72/77 (93.5%) pneumonia super-infection (acquired during hospitalisation). Median ICU stay and ventilation duration before the first VAP were 10 (IQR, 6-14) and 9 (IQR, 6-14) days respectively; 51/65 (78.5%) VAP were late-onset. The length of hospitalization was longer for patients with VAP than in ventilated patients without VAP (23 vs 8 days, p<0.001) ( Table 1) . The most frequent bacteria involved in VAP (Table 1, S2 Table) were Staphylococcus aureus (17/65, 26.2%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (11/65, 16.9%), Klebsiella pneumoniae (9/65, 13.8%) and Escherichia coli (8/65, 12.3%). No difference was observed in the distribution of bacteria between early-and late-onset VAP (data not shown). Among Enterobacterales, 11/37 (29.7%) were resistant to third-generation cephalosporins but susceptible to carbapenems (8 extendedspectrum beta-lactamase and 3 high-level expression of cephalosporinase) and 5/37 (13.5%) were resistant to carbapenems (all harboring an NDM-type carbapenemase). Strikingly, we observed an unusual persistence of bacteria in the respiratory samples of patients with VAP despite an adequate antibiotic therapy. Among patients still hospitalized 7 days following the initial VAP, the responsible bacteria was still detected in culture in 57.4% (27/47) of cases. Presence of the bacteria, was 23.1% (6/26) among those who were still hospitalized 16 days following initial VAP (S1 Fig). The comparison of patients with (27/47) or without (20/47) persistent VAP at D7 shows a lower age (52y vs 60.6y, p<0.01) and a higher BMI (31.5 vs 27.8, p = 0.018) among those with persistent VAP (S3 Table) . Here, we showed that almost half of COVID-19 ICU patients developed a bacterial infection. Our study highlights two bacteriological peculiarities in these patients (i) an epidemiology of BSI that may suggest digestive or oropharyngeal translocations and (ii) a persistence of bacteria in the lungs of patients adequately treated for VAP. We observed a higher rate (33.5%) of positive blood cultures than reported in the literature (3.8% to 12%) [9, 10] and by the same ICUs last year (12.8%, personal data). More than half of these were considered as contaminants that may be due to changes in guidelines and safety ) and Enterococci (18%), (personal data). Interestingly, in 54.8% of episodes, no origin of the BSI could be determined and translocation of bacteria from digestive or oropharyngeal microbiota was suspected. One hypothesis is that the hyperinflammatory status of COVID-19 patients may increase the permeability of the intestinal or oropharyngeal barriers and thus bacterial translocations. The description of the composition of the intestinal and oropharyngeal microbiota would be helpful to understand the origin of these unusual BSIs [11] . We also observed that 50.4% of COVID-19 ICU intubated patients developed a VAP, a rate much higher than observed in the literature (ranging from 0% in USA [12] , 7.5% [13] in Spain, and to 30.6% in France) [14] . The distribution of bacteria causing VAP did not show any particularity, however, we observed a high rate of multi-drug resistant bacteria (MDRB). This could be explained by an increased use of antibiotics in COVID-19 patients (91%), associated with an increase of MDRB dissemination in the ICUs. Antibiotic prescription is often challenging and must take into account, on one hand, the pathology, the isolated bacteria and its sensitivity to antibiotics, the clinical evolution of the patient, and on the other hand, the risk of emergence of bacterial resistance. All these criteria are even more difficult to manage with a such complicated pathology as COVID-19 and in a crisis situation [15] . Surprisingly, we observed that VAP bacteria clearance from the lungs was exceptionally slow despite adequate antibiotic therapy. The cause of antimicrobial failures remains speculative. The main reasons advocated by experts are (i) pharmacodynamic alterations due to frequent glomerular hyperfiltration, even though in our study we did not find any difference in renal function between the patients, (ii) pharmacodynamic alterations due to a high BMI, which seems to be the case in this study, (iii) a probable decrease in the antimicrobial lung concentration associated with pulmonary emboli and obstruction of the pulmonary vasculature frequently observed in ICU COVID-19 patients [16] , and/or (iv) an impaired immune response. To our knowledge, these observations have not previously been described in the literature. However, the duration of microbiological persistence of VAP bacteria according to the clinical outcome is unknown. A study showed that in 46% of clinical cure pneumonia, a microbiological failure (persistence of bacteria) was observed [17] . However, in our study, the microbiological failure was systematically associated with clinical failure justifying a repeat sampling. A case-control study to explore the microbiological outcome in COVID-19 patients with VAP would be needed. This retrospective observational study was conducted in a single center (comprising two ICUs) with a small sample size and only during the first wave of SARS-CoV-2 epidemic infections. Our observations should be confirmed by a multi-center case-control study and experimental confirmation. In conclusion, this work is the first of its kind to describe bacterial persistence in the lungs despite adequate therapy, as well as frequent bloodstream infections possibly associated with bacterial translocations originating from the digestive or oropharyngeal microbiota, in COVID-19 ICU patients. 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