November 16, 2015
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Concomitant infection rare, treatment failure common in infants with SSTI

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A recent investigation in Hospital Pediatrics revealed that children aged younger than 90 days presenting with skin and soft tissue infections often experienced treatment failure that led to hospital revisitation, but rarely developed concomitant bacterial infections.

Perspective from C. Buddy Creech, MD, MPH

“Skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs), most commonly cellulitis or cutaneous abscess, are an increasingly common cause of pediatric hospital visits, including among infants,” Gabrielle Hester, MD, MS, of the department of hospital medicine at Children’s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota, and colleagues wrote. “First, we found a low rate of identified invasive bacterial infections, among infants [aged younger than] 90 days presenting for a hospital encounter for SSTI.

“Second, SSTI treatment failure was a common cause for hospital revisit, particularly in patients with perianal location of infection.”

The researchers analyzed medical records of 172 children aged younger than 90 days diagnosed with SSTI at one of 22 EDs in Utah from July 2004 through 2011. Patient records were examined for urinary tract infections and invasive bacterial infections, as well as any unplanned change in care at a hospital revisitation within 14 days of the patient’s initial discharge.

Study data revealed that 17% of infants were febrile, and 53% had at least one sterile site culture confirmed for bacterial infection. The overall proportion of concomitant bacterial infection was 0.58% (95% CI, 0.01%-3.2%). However, only 76 patients had blood cultures obtained. Furthermore, the one case of concomitant infection also was in the febrile group, resulting in a rate of 4% for febrile children with confirmed concomitant infection.

Sixteen patients revisited a hospital due to treatment failure, of which eight had a change in antibiotics, 11 underwent a new procedure such as an incision or drainage, and three were admitted to the hospital.

“Clinicians may consider limiting evaluation for urinary tract infection and invasive bacterial infection in afebrile infants presenting with SSTI if other criteria for more extensive evaluation are not met and if identification is unlikely to change management,” Hester and colleagues wrote. “A clear short-term follow-up care plan is important for infants with SSTI, especially those with perianal infections, who … may experience a higher rate of treatment failure.”– by David Costill

Disclosure: Hester reports no relevant financial disclosures. Please see the full study for a list of all other authors’ relevant financial disclosures.