Ventilator-associated pneumonia in very low-birth-weight infants at the time of nosocomial bloodstream infection and during airway colonization with Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Am J Infect Control. 2000 Oct;28(5):333-9. doi: 10.1067/mic.2000.109884.

Abstract

Purpose: To study retrospectively the incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) at the time of Pseudomonas aeruginosa nosocomial bloodstream infection (BSI) and at the time of P aeruginosa airway colonization.

Materials and methods: Fifteen very low-birth-weight infants who had P aeruginosa BSI and 33 others who did not but who had P aeruginosa airway-colonization were studied. We correlated clinical data, blood cultures (BCs), and tracheal cultures (TCs) with radiologic findings from radio-graphs taken within 2 days before, the day of, and 1 day after BCs or TCs were first positive for P aeruginosa. Chest radiographs were graded by using semiquantitative scores for bronchopulmonary dysplasia and for pneumonia.

Results: Mean birth weight, gestational age, and age when BC or TC became positive were similar for patients with BSI and colonization. At the time of BSI, 2 infants had airway colonization with P aeruginosa; the TCs of the remaining 13 grew P aeruginosa as a new pathogen. Thirteen of 15 patients with BSI, but none of 33 infants with colonization, died within 2 days of positive BC. VAP was diagnosed in 13 of 15 patients with BSI and in 3 of 33 infants with colonization.

Conclusion: Mechanically ventilated very low-birth-weight infants whose TCs yield P aeruginosa but whose BCs remain negative infrequently have VAP are presumed airway-colonized and are expected to survive. Conversely, VAP is likely to be found when BCs and TCs simultaneously grow P aeruginosa, and high mortality is anticipated.

MeSH terms

  • Birth Weight
  • Cross Infection / blood
  • Cross Infection / epidemiology*
  • Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field
  • Equipment Contamination
  • Female
  • Gestational Age
  • Hospital Records
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Infant, Very Low Birth Weight*
  • Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
  • Male
  • Ohio / epidemiology
  • Pneumonia / epidemiology
  • Pneumonia / etiology*
  • Pneumonia / microbiology
  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa / isolation & purification*
  • Respiration, Artificial / adverse effects*
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Trachea / microbiology