"Pulmonary Nocardiosis in Western Europe-Clinical evaluation of 43 patients and population-based estimates of hospitalization rates".
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
30658169
Description
BACKGROUND
Pulmonary nocardiosis (PN) is an uncommon but potentially life-threatening infection. Most of our knowledge is derived from case reports or smaller case series. Recently, increasing PN incidence rates have been reported. We aim to describe the clinical course of and risk factors for PN in four Western European countries and to estimate population-based annual hospitalization rates.
METHODS
Retrospective evaluation (1995 to 2011) of the clinical course of and risk factors for PN in patients from 11 hospitals in four European countries (Germany, Austria, Switzerland and The Netherlands). Calculation of population-based estimates of hospitalization rates of PN in Germany (2005 to 2011) using official German nationwide diagnosis-related groups (DRG) hospital statistics.
RESULTS
Forty-three patients fulfilled stringent criteria for proven (n=8) and probable (n=35) PN; seven with extrapulmonary dissemination. Within the 43 patients, major PN risk factors were immunocompromising (83.7%) and/or pulmonary (58.1%; in 27.9% as only comorbidity) comorbidities. Median duration of PN targeted therapy was 12 weeks. Distinguished patterns of resistance were observed (imipenem susceptibility: N. farcinica 33.3%; N. asteroides 66.7%). Overall mortality rate was 18.9%; in disseminated PN 50%. Over time, annual PN hospitalization rates remained unchanged at around 0.04/100'000 with the highest rate among men aged 75-84 years (0.24/100'000).
CONCLUSION
PN is rare, but potentially life-threatening, and mainly affects immunocompromised elder males. Overall annual hospitalization rates remained stable between 2005 and 2011.
Pulmonary nocardiosis (PN) is an uncommon but potentially life-threatening infection. Most of our knowledge is derived from case reports or smaller case series. Recently, increasing PN incidence rates have been reported. We aim to describe the clinical course of and risk factors for PN in four Western European countries and to estimate population-based annual hospitalization rates.
METHODS
Retrospective evaluation (1995 to 2011) of the clinical course of and risk factors for PN in patients from 11 hospitals in four European countries (Germany, Austria, Switzerland and The Netherlands). Calculation of population-based estimates of hospitalization rates of PN in Germany (2005 to 2011) using official German nationwide diagnosis-related groups (DRG) hospital statistics.
RESULTS
Forty-three patients fulfilled stringent criteria for proven (n=8) and probable (n=35) PN; seven with extrapulmonary dissemination. Within the 43 patients, major PN risk factors were immunocompromising (83.7%) and/or pulmonary (58.1%; in 27.9% as only comorbidity) comorbidities. Median duration of PN targeted therapy was 12 weeks. Distinguished patterns of resistance were observed (imipenem susceptibility: N. farcinica 33.3%; N. asteroides 66.7%). Overall mortality rate was 18.9%; in disseminated PN 50%. Over time, annual PN hospitalization rates remained unchanged at around 0.04/100'000 with the highest rate among men aged 75-84 years (0.24/100'000).
CONCLUSION
PN is rare, but potentially life-threatening, and mainly affects immunocompromised elder males. Overall annual hospitalization rates remained stable between 2005 and 2011.
Date of Publication
2019-01-15
Publication Type
Article
Keyword(s)
nocardia nocardiosis pulmonary nocardiosis
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Meier, N | |
Kolditz, Martin | |
Bauer, Torsten T | |
Rohde, Gernot | |
Presterl, Elisabeth | |
Schürmann, Dirk | |
Lepper, Philipp M | |
Ringshausen, Felix C | |
Flick, Holger | |
Pletz, Mathias W |
Additional Credits
Series
International journal of infectious diseases
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
1201-9712
Access(Rights)
open.access