Tests confirm 3 more Ebola cases in DRC's Equateur province outbreak
Three more Ebola cases have been confirmed in a recently emerged outbreak centered in the Democratic Republic of the Congo's (DRC's) Equateur province, raising the total to 33, the World Health Organization (WHO) African regional office said on Twitter today.
No new deaths were reported, keeping the total at 13. Of the 33 cases, 30 are lab confirmed, and 3 are listed as probable. No other details were noted about the three most recent cases.
The latest outbreak is occurring in the country's northwest region, in the same area as its ninth such outbreak, which occurred in 2018, resulting in 54 illnesses, 33 of them fatal. Some health zones affected are in remote forested areas, though some cases have been detected in Mbandaka, the provincial capital located on a river, raising worries about further spread.
Also, some of the latest confirmed and suspected cases are still in the community, a factor known to increase the risk of community transmission.
Jul 1 WHO African regional office tweet
Jun 30 CIDRAP News scan "DRC's Equateur province outbreak total rises to 30"
Study: Hospital patients allergic to penicillin twice as likely to receive beta-lactam alternatives
Hospitalized patients with a documented penicillin allergy are nearly twice as likely to receive a potentially harmful beta-lactam antibiotic alternative, US researchers reported in JAMA Internal Medicine.
In a cross-sectional study of 10,992 patients receiving antibiotics at 106 US hospitals, a team led by researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) found that 1,741 patients (16%) had a documented penicillin allergy. Compared with patients without a documented penicillin allergy, those with a documented allergy had higher beta-lactam alternative antibiotic use (1,114 of 1,741 [64%] vs 4,438 of 9,251 [48%]) and lower narrow-spectrum beta-lactam use (227 of 1,741 [13%] vs 2,811 of 9,251 [30%]).
In the fully adjusted model, the adjusted odds ratio (aOR) for receiving beta-lactam alternative antibiotics was 1.94 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.74 to 2.17) for patients with a documented penicillin allergy, with especially high odds of clindamycin use (aOR, 5.34; 95% CI, 3.99 to 7.13), which is associated with an increased risk of Clostridioides difficile infection. Patients with a documented allergy also had lower odds of receiving a narrow-spectrum beta-lactam (aOR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.31 to 0.40).
The association between a documented penicillin allergy and alternative antibiotic use was stronger among patients receiving prophylactic antibiotics for surgery (aOR, 7.31; 95% CI, 5.01 to 10.69) and those receiving antibiotics for urinary tract infection (aOR, 2.07; 95% CI, 1.51 to 2.85).
The authors of the study note that since studies have found that only a small percentage of patients with documented penicillin allergies are truly allergic, at least 90% of the alternative antibiotic recommendations were likely unnecessary.
"Unfortunately, antibiotic decisions are often made based on limited information or without a thorough investigation," senior author Rochelle Walensky, MD, MPH, chief of infectious diseases at MGH, said in a press release. "We learned from our study that antibiotic prescribing without full allergy information can ultimately do the patient more harm than good."
Walensky and her colleagues suggest hospitals should conduct inpatient penicillin allergy interventions on patients prescribed clindamycin and those with planned surgical procedures.
Jun 29 JAMA Internal Med research letter
Jun 30 MGH press release
WHO experts urge antimicrobial stewardship during pandemic response
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) experts from the WHO are urging that antimicrobial stewardship activities be integrated into the COVID-19 pandemic response.
In an editorial published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization, scientists with the WHO's Department of Global Coordination and Partnership on Antimicrobial Resistance note that while the WHO's interim guidance on COVID-19 treatment incorporates antibiotic stewardship principles with specific recommendations, a broader strategy to address antimicrobial use during the pandemic is needed. They call for five specific measures to be integrated into the pandemic response across the broader health system.
The first measure they recommend is increased training for healthcare workers treating COVID-19 patients, with a focus on improving the recognition of signs of severe COVID-19 and superimposed bacterial or fungal infections, eliminating unnecessary antibiotic use, evaluating the need for medical devices that may increase the risk of bacterial infections, and implementing strict infection prevention and control measures.
The other recommended measures include improving COVID-19 testing to reduce turnaround time and the urge to initiate empiric antibiotics; ensuring the continuity of essential health services that, if interrupted, could lead to increased use of antibiotics; exercising maximum caution on the use of biocides for environmental and personal disinfection; using biocides with a low selection pressure for antibiotic resistance; and addressing research gaps to ensure that antimicrobial stewardship activities become an integral part of the pandemic response.
"These measures would stem the emergence of untreatable drug-resistant infections and diseases that could potentially lead to another public health emergency," the authors write.
July 2020 Bull World Health Organ editorial