已发表论文

后续脑脊液培养对革兰氏阴性细菌性脑膜炎/脑炎神经外科患者预后的影响

 

Authors Sun J, Shi Y, Ding Y, Wang S, Qian L, Luan X, Li G, Chen Y, Li X, Lv H, Zheng G, Zhang G

Received 4 July 2023

Accepted for publication 7 September 2023

Published 22 September 2023 Volume 2023:16 Pages 6285—6295

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IDR.S425799

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Professor Suresh Antony

Background: To investigate the factors associated with follow-up CSF cultures (FUCCs) in post-neurosurgical patients with gram-negative bacterial meningitis/encephalitis and the effect of FUCCs on treatment management and patient outcomes.
Methods: This single-centered retrospective cohort study enrolled post-neurosurgical patients with gram-negative bacterial meningitis/encephalitis at a tertiary-care university hospital between 2012 and 2022. The risk factors for 28-day mortality were evaluated using multivariate Cox analysis. FUCC-related risk factors were also analyzed.
Results: Among the 844 enrolled patients, 504 (59.7%) underwent FUCC, and FUCC was found to be associated with lower rates of both all-cause (hazard ratio (HR) 0.391; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.235– 0.651; p< 0.001) and attributable mortality (HR 0.463; 95% CI, 0.239– 0.897; p=0.023) in Post-neurosurgical patients diagnosed with Gram-negative bacterial meningitis/encephalitis. Moreover, the results of the study underscored that patients with persistent gram-negative bacterial meningitis/encephalitis had a lower all-cause/attributable short-term survival rate according to 28-day mortality Kaplan–Meier analysis (P=0.001/0.006).
Conclusion: Performing FUCC has been demonstrated to lower mortality rates in Post-neurosurgical patients suffering from Gram-negative bacterial meningitis/encephalitis. The higher mortality rate observed in patients with persistent gram-negative bacterial meningitis/encephalitis suggests that performing FUCC is a crucial component of proper patient care and management, and is therefore recommended for use by clinicians as a standard practice. This finding underscores the significance of consistent implementation of FUCC in the management and prognosis of patients with Post-neurosurgical infections.
Keywords: gram-negative bacterial meningitis/encephalitis, follow-up cerebrospinal fluid cultures, all-cause 28-day mortality, persistent meningitis/encephalitis, risk factors