Rev Esp Quimioter 2013:26(4):312-331

Bugs, hosts and ICU environment: Countering pan-resistance in nosocomial microbiota and treating bacterial infections in the critical care setting 

EMILIO MASEDA, JOSÉ MENSA, JUAN-CARLOS VALÍA, JOSE-IGNACIO GOMEZ-HERRERAS, FERNANDO RAMASCO, ENRIC SAMSO, MIGUEL-ANGEL CHIVELI, JORGE PEREIRA, RAFAEL GONZÁLEZ, GERARDO AGUILAR, GONZALO TAMAYO, NAZARIO OJEDA, JESÚS RICO, MARÍA JOSÉ GIMENEZ, LORENZO AGUILAR             

ICUs are areas where resistance problems are the largest, and they constitutes a major problem for the intensivist’s clinical practice. Main resistance phenotypes among nosocomial microbiota are: i) vancomycin-resistance/heteroresistance and tolerance in grampositives (MRSA, enterococci) and ii) efflux pumps/enzymatic resistance mechanisms (ESBLs, AmpC, metallobetalactamases) in gramnegatives. These phenotypes are found at different rates in pathogens causing respiratory (nosocomial pneumonia/ventilator-associated pneumonia), bloodstream (primary bacteremia/catheter-associated bacteremia), urinary, intraabdominal and surgical wound infections and endocarditis in the ICU. New antibiotics are available to overcome non-susceptibility in grampositives; however, accumulation of resistance traits in gramnegatives has lead to multidrug resistance, a worrisome problem nowadays. This article reviews by microorganism/infection risk factors for multidrug resistance, suggesting adequate empirical treatments. Drugs, patient and environmental factors all play a role in the decision to prescribe/recommend antibiotic regimens in the specific ICU patient, implying that intensivists should be familiar with available drugs, environmental epidemiology and patient factors.

Rev Esp Quimioter 2013:26(4):312-331 [pdf]