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result(s) for
"Main, Cheryl"
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Correlation of fecal calprotectin levels with the detection of treatable enteric pathogens in children with severe acute diarrheal disease in Botswana
by
Rehan, Muhammad
,
Mokomane, Margaret
,
Pernica, Jeffrey M.
in
Acute Disease
,
Adenoviruses
,
Antigens
2025
Diarrheal disease is a leading cause of death among young children globally. Current guidelines recommend supportive treatment of acute diarrhea and using antimicrobials only with presence of blood in the stool. Select enteric pathogens, including Shigella , commonly cause disease in high-burden settings; targeted treatment of these pathogens could decrease morbidity and mortality. In settings with limited access to microbiological testing, practical diagnostics are needed to differentiate treatable causes of pediatric diarrhea. Evolving evidence suggests fecal calprotectin (fCal) could help differentiate viral and bacterial gastroenteritis. This study describes a post hoc analysis of stool samples prospectively collected from children hospitalized with severe acute diarrheal disease in Botswana. Specimens were characterized using multiplex PCR panels for selected enteropathogens and assayed for fCal. Stool samples from 312 participants were tested. Samples positive for Shigella had significantly higher fCal than samples positive for rotavirus. Stools that were negative for all assayed pathogens had higher fCal values than expected using standard normative values for healthy children in higher-income settings. Given the prevalence of Shigella and rotavirus infections in young children globally, fCal may be a useful aid to identify children with acute diarrhea for whom antimicrobials could provide benefit and potentially reduce growth failure and mortality.
Journal Article
Local audit of empiric antibiotic therapy in bacteremia: A retrospective cohort study
by
Mertz, Dominik
,
Bai, Anthony D.
,
Main, Cheryl
in
Antibiotic resistance
,
Antibiotics
,
Bacteremia
2021
It is unclear if a local audit would be useful in providing guidance on how to improve local practice of empiric antibiotic therapy. We performed an audit of antibiotic therapy in bacteremia to evaluate the proportion and risk factors for inadequate empiric antibiotic coverage.
This retrospective cohort study included patients with positive blood cultures across 3 hospitals in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada during October of 2019. Antibiotic therapy was considered empiric if it was administered within 24 hours after blood culture collection. Adequate coverage was defined as when the isolate from blood culture was tested to be susceptible to the empiric antibiotic. A multivariable logistic regression model was used to predict inadequate empiric coverage. Diagnostic accuracy of a clinical pathway based on patient risk factors was compared to clinician's decision in predicting which bacteria to empirically cover.
Of 201 bacteremia cases, empiric coverage was inadequate in 56 (27.9%) cases. Risk factors for inadequate empiric coverage included unknown source at initiation of antibiotic therapy (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) of 2.76 95% CI 1.27-6.01, P = 0.010) and prior antibiotic therapy within 90 days (aOR of 2.46 95% CI 1.30-4.74, P = 0.006). A clinical pathway that considered community-associated infection as low risk for Pseudomonas was better at ruling out Pseudomonas bacteremia with a negative likelihood ratio of 0.17 (95% CI 0.03-1.10) compared to clinician's decision with negative likelihood ratio of 0.34 (95% CI 0.10-1.22).
An audit of antibiotic therapy in bacteremia is feasible and may provide useful feedback on how to locally improve empiric antibiotic therapy.
Journal Article
A Controlled Quasi-Experimental Study of an Educational Intervention to Reduce the Unnecessary Use of Antimicrobials For Asymptomatic Bacteriuria
2015
Asymptomatic bacteriuria (ABU) should only be treated in cases of pregnancy or in-patients undergoing urologic procedures; however, unnecessary treatment of ABU is common in clinical practice.
To identify risk factors for unnecessary treatment and to assess the impact of an educational intervention focused on these risk factors on treatment of ABU.
Quasi-experimental study with a control group.
Two tertiary teaching adult care hospitals.
Consecutive patients with positive urine cultures between January 30th and April 17th, 2012 (baseline) and January 30th and April 30th, 2013 (intervention).
In January 2013, a multifaceted educational intervention based on risk factors identified during the baseline period was provided to medical residents (monthly) on one clinical teaching unit (CTU) at one hospital site, with the CTU of the other hospital serving as the control.
During the baseline period, 160/341 (46.9%) positive urine cultures were obtained from asymptomatic patients at the two hospitals, and 94/160 (58.8%) were inappropriately treated with antibiotics. Risk factors for inappropriate use included: female gender (OR 2.1, 95% CI 1.1-4.3), absence of a catheter (OR 2.5, 1.2-5), bacteriuria versus candiduria (OR 10.6, 3.8-29.4), pyuria (OR 2.0, 1.1-3.8), and positive nitrites (OR 2.2, 1.1-4.5). In 2013, only 2/24 (8%) of ABU patients were inappropriately treated on the intervention CTU as compared to 14/29 (52%) on the control CTU (OR 0.10; 95% CI 0.02-0.49). A reduction was also observed as compared to baseline on the intervention CTU (OR 0.1, 0.02-0.7) with no significant change noted on the control CTU (OR 0.47, 0.13-1.7).
A multifaceted educational intervention geared towards medical residents with a focus on identified risk factors for inappropriate management of ABU was effective in reducing unnecessary antibiotic use.
Journal Article
Drug use prior to incarceration and associated socio-behavioural factors among males in a provincial correctional facility in Ontario, Canada
2014
OBJECTIVES:To describe the prevalence of drug use in males in a provincial detention centre during the year before incarceration and to examine the association between socio-demographic and behavioural factors and drug use.
METHODS:In 2009, 500 adult males completed a survey after admission to a provincial detention centre in Ontario. Past-year prevalence rates were calculated for the use of opioids, cocaine, crack and methamphetamine, and by route of administration. Bivariate logistic regression was used to examine associations between drug use and socio-demographic and behavioural factors.
RESULTS:More than 56% of participants reported use of opioids, cocaine, crack or methamphetamine in the previous year. Risk factors for blood-borne and sexually transmitted infections were commonly reported for the previous year: 12.2% had injected drugs, 78.0% had had unprotected sex, and 48.0% had had more than one sexual partner. In unadjusted analyses, participants who were older than 24 years were more likely to have used any drugs and to have injected drugs in the previous year.
CONCLUSIONS:This study provides the first Canadian data in the past decade on drug use by recently incarcerated adults. We found that drug use and behaviours that increase the risk of transmission of sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections remain very common in this population. Incarceration provides an opportunity to provide services and links to programs for people who use drugs, which could decrease drug-related harms to individuals and society.
Journal Article
A Brief Report of West Nile Virus Neuroinvasive Disease in the Summer of 2012 in Hamilton, Ontario
2014
West Nile neuroinvasive disease is a severe infectious disease that is associated with a high mortality rate, especially in immunocompromised hosts. Physicians who are aware of its clinical presentations may be able to order diagnostic tests more appropriately and avoid inappropriate treatment. In the present series, the cases of seven patients admitted to Hamilton Health Sciences (Hamilton, Ontario) in the summer of 2012 with a diagnosis of West Nile neuroinvasive disease were retrospectively reviewed based on available medical records. According to the clinical and laboratory criteria published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, five cases were diagnosed as encephalitis, one case as meningitis and one case as meningomyelitis. Patients were managed supportively. Forty‐three percent (three of seven) presented with rash, 71% (five of seven) did not report headache despite exhibiting neurological symptoms, 43% (three of seven) did not have fever on presentation and 37.5% of cerebrospinal fluid samples exhibited a neutrophil predominance. The mortality rate in the present series was 14.3% (one of seven), and 57.1% (four of seven) of the patients had residual symptoms on discharge and at follow‐up.
Journal Article
Ectopic cervical thymus, not your average neck lump
2023
A 5-week old baby boy presented to accident and emergency with a soft leftsided submandibular swelling and intermittent stridor (figure 1). ART, left common carotid artery; JUG, left internal jugular vein. Imaging alone can be used reliably to diagnose ectopic cervical thymus avoiding biopsy subject to confidence of the surgeons and radiologists, if the appearances are typical.
Journal Article
Short-course antimicrobial therapy for paediatric respiratory infections (SAFER): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
by
Harman, Stuart
,
Kam, April
,
Pernica, Jeffrey
in
Age Factors
,
Amoxicillin
,
Amoxicillin - administration & dosage
2018
Background
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is commonly diagnosed in children. The Infectious Disease Society of America guidelines recommend 10 days of high-dose amoxicillin for the treatment of non-severe CAP but 5-day “short course” therapy may be just as effective. Randomized trials in adults have already demonstrated non-inferiority of 5-day short-course treatment for adults hospitalized with severe CAP and for adults with mild CAP treated as outpatients. Minimizing exposure to antimicrobials is desirable to avoid harms including diarrhoea, rashes, severe allergic reactions, increased circulating antimicrobial resistance, and microbiome disruption.
Methods
The objective of this multicentre, randomized, non-inferiority, controlled trial is to investigate whether 5 days of high-dose amoxicillin is associated with lower rates of clinical cure 14–21 days later as compared to 10 days of high-dose amoxicillin, the reference standard. Recruitment and enrolment will occur in the emergency departments of McMaster Children’s Hospital and the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario. All children in the study will receive 5 days of amoxicillin after which point they will receive either 5 days of a different formulation of amoxicillin or a placebo. Assuming a clinical failure rate of 5% in the reference arm, a non-inferiority margin of 7.5%, one-sided alpha set at 0.025 and power of 0.80, 270 participants will be required. Participants from a previous feasibility study (n = 60) will be rolled over into the current study. We will be performing multiplex respiratory virus molecular testing, quantification of nasopharyngeal pneumococcal genomic loads, salivary inflammatory marker testing, and faecal microbiome profiling on participants.
Discussion
This is a pragmatic study seeking to provide high-quality evidence for front-line physicians evaluating children presenting with mild CAP in North American emergency departments in the post-13-valent pneumococcal, conjugate vaccine era. High-quality evidence supporting the non-inferiority of short-course therapy for non-severe paediatric CAP should be generated prior to making changes to established guidelines.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov,
NCT02380352
. Registered on 2 March 2015.
Journal Article
Examination of staphylococcal stethoscope contamination in the emergency department (pilot) study (EXSSCITED pilot study)
by
Worster, Andrew
,
Main, Cheryl L.
,
Srigley, Jocelyn A.
in
Colony Count, Microbial
,
Cross Infection - epidemiology
,
Cross Infection - microbiology
2011
The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of Staphylococcus-contaminated stethoscopes belonging to emergency department (ED) staff and to identify the proportion of these that were Staphylococcus aureus or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
We conducted a prospective observational cohort study of bacterial cultures from 100 ED staff members' stethoscopes at three EDs. Study participants were asked to complete a questionnaire.
Fifty-four specimens grew coagulase-negative staphylococci and one grew methicillin-susceptible S. aureus. No MRSA was cultured. Only 8% of participants, all of whom were nurses, reported cleaning their stethoscope before or after each patient assessment. Alcohol-based wipes were most commonly used to clean stethoscopes. A lack of time, being too busy, and forgetfulness were the most frequently reported reasons for not cleaning the stethoscope in the ED.
This study indicates that although stethoscope contamination rates in these EDs are high, the prevalence of S. aureus or MRSA on stethoscopes is low.
Journal Article
Polymicrobial brain abscesses: A complex condition with diagnostic and therapeutic challenges
by
Eichorn, Frances-Claire
,
Kameda-Smith, Michelle
,
Graham, Alice K
in
Abscess
,
Abscesses
,
Brain
2024
Brain abscesses (BA) are focal parenchymal infections that remain life-threatening conditions. Polymicrobial BAs (PBAs) are complex coinfections of bacteria or bacterial and nonbacterial pathogens such as fungi or parasites, with diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. In this article, we comprehensively review the prevalence, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, and microbiological, histopathological, and radiological features of PBAs, as well as treatment and prognosis. While PBAs and monomicrobial BAs have some similarities such as nonspecific clinical presentations, PBAs are more complex in their pathogenesis, pathological, and imaging presentations. The diagnostic challenges of PBAs include nonspecific imaging features at early stages and difficulties in identification of some pathogens by routine techniques without the use of molecular analysis. Imaging of late-stage PBAs demonstrates increased heterogeneity within lesions, which corresponds to variable histopathological features depending on the dominant pathogen-induced changes in different areas. This heterogeneity is particularly marked in cases of coinfections with nonbacterial pathogens such as Toxoplasma gondii. Therapeutic challenges in the management of PBAs include initial medical therapy for possibly underrecognized coinfections prior to identification of multiple pathogens and subsequent broad-spectrum antimicrobial therapy to eradicate identified pathogens. PBAs deserve more awareness to facilitate prompt and appropriate treatment.
Journal Article