The search strategy identified 1331 records from MEDLINE (n=330), Embase (n=296), Web of Science (n=96), Scopus (n=585), and an additional 24 records through medRxiv (Figure 1). After removal of duplicates, 1049 articles remained for title and abstract screening. Seventy-five articles were eligible for full-text screening of which 38 met inclusion criteria. Geographical origin of the 38 studies (Table 1) was as follows: Belgium (n=2), China (n=1), Egypt (n=1), France (n=3), Greece (n=1), India (n=2), Italy (n=11), Iran (n=4), Mexico (n=1), Saudi Arabia (n=1), Spain (n=4), Switzerland (n=1), Qatar (n=1), United Kingdom (n=2), and United States (n=4). Twenty-seven (71%) studies enrolled patients from the intensive care unit (ICU), whereas 6 (16%) studies enrolled patients from COVID-specific care units, and 5 (13%) studies had an unspecified setting. The following study designs were identified: retrospective cohort (n=8), case series (n=5), case report (n=3), cross-sectional (n=3), prospective observational (n=1), prospective cohort (n=3), retrospective observational (n=12), and 3 case-control studies. Sample sizes ranged from 1 to 4267 patients. Twelve studies contained patient-level data for 112 individuals (Table 1). Patient characteristics in studies meeting inclusion criteria are presented in Supplementary Material 4. Risk of bias (Supplementary Material 3) revealed the overall quality of the included studies. Majority of the studies were poor with limited reporting of microbiological detail including sample type, microbiological investigations, antimicrobial susceptibility testing methods, and definitions of resistance.
Table 1
Summary of study characteristics of the 38 included studies.
First Author
|
Location
|
Hospital Setting
|
Study Type
|
Microbiological Detection and/or Identification
|
Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing Method
|
Chowdhary27
|
New Delhi, India
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Cohort
|
MALDI-ToF MS
|
CLSI Broth Microdilution Method M27-A3/S4
|
Bogossian33
|
Brussels, Belgium
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Case Control
|
Routine surveillance swabs: chromID® CARBA SMART agar, MacConkey agar containing ceftazidime chromID® VRE agar, MALDI-ToF MS
|
EUCAST: VITEK 2 and disk diffusion Carbapenemases OXA-48, KPC, NDM, VIM and IMP; VanA, VanB were detected
via PCR analysis or Coris Resist-5 O.O.K.N.V. antigenic. MDR Pseudomonas spp. and
Acinetobacter spp. were defined as recommended considering antimicrobial resistance phenotype
|
Ramadan28
|
Assiut, Egypt
|
Tertiary hospitals: Alrahji Liver Hospital and Assiut University Hospital
|
Prospective Cohort
|
MALDI-ToF MS
|
Detection of antibiotic resistance genes by Monoplex PCR Technique (mecA, NDM-1, KPC, TEM, CTX-M, SHV)
|
Amarsy34
|
Nantes, France
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Cohort
|
Blood cultures and respiratory cultures
|
Detection of resistance genes by Illumina WGS
|
Perez20
|
New Jersey, USA
|
ICU, Medical-surgical unit, progressive care unit
|
Retro-spective Cohort
|
Clinical specimens, colonization screening
|
CRAB definition:
Detection using RT-PCR for carbapenemase genes
|
Salehi23
|
Tehran, Iran
|
Three tertiary care training hospitals
|
Cross-Sectional
|
Budding yeasts and pseudohyphae in KOH 10% preparation and culture
|
CLSI M60 and M59 supplements
|
Cataldo35
|
Rome, Italy
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Cohort
|
Blood cultures
|
NA
|
Posteraro36
|
Basel, Switzerland
|
COVID care unit
|
Case Report
|
MALDI-ToF MS
|
Sensititre YeastOne® method confirmed by the CLSI M27-A3 reference method
|
Nori4
|
New York, City, NY, USA
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observa-tional
|
Respiratory cultures, blood cultures
|
NA
|
Mahmoudi37
|
Hamedan, Iran
|
Nahavand Hospitals
|
Cross-Sectional
|
Blood and endotracheal aspirate samples
|
CLSI
|
Li38
|
Wuhan, China
|
Hospital (designated for COVID patients)
|
Retro-spective Cross-Sectional
|
Qualified sputum, endotracheal aspirate, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, blood samples, or
qualified urine
|
CLSI
|
Contou19
|
Argenteuil, France
|
COVID ICU
|
Retro-spective Cross-Sectional
|
Blood cultures, cultures of the respiratory tract secretions
|
Panel RP2 plus (Film Array Biomerieux®), Panel Pneumonia Plus (Film Array Biomerieux®)
|
Mo39
|
Brooklyn, New York
|
Community Teaching Hospital
|
Case Series (Retro-spective Observa-tional)
|
NA
|
NA
|
Garcia-Menino9
|
Oviedo, Spain
|
ICU
|
Case Series (Retro-spective Observa-tional)
|
MALDI TOF/MS -
|
Microscan System (BeckmanCoulter, Brea, CA, USA); results interpreted according to EUCAST
|
Sharifipour21
|
Qom, Iran,
|
ICU
|
Prospective Cohort
|
Samples were cultured on Blood Agar, Chocolate Agar, Eosin Methylene Blue (EMB), and MacConkey Agar
|
CLSI
|
Walpole40
|
United Kingdom
|
ICU
|
Case Report
|
Sputum sample
|
NA
|
Razazi11
|
France
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Cohort
|
Bacterial co-infection at ICU admission evidenced by detection of bacteria in sputum or blood samples, in the absence of other sources of infection, or by a positive pneumococcal or L. pneumophila serotype 1 urinary antigen test
|
Susceptibility profiles of recovered microorganisms were recorded
|
Guisado-Gil18
|
Seville, Spain
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Cohort
|
Blood cultures obtained >48 h after admission
|
EUCAST. MDR categorization according to the Germany Society for Hygiene and Microbiology
|
Montrucchio41
|
Turin, Italy
|
ICU
|
Case Series (Retro-spective Observa-tional)
|
MALDI-ToF MS
|
EUCAST: Microscan WalkAway plus System, MASTDISCS® Combi Carba plus disk system
|
Mady24
|
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
|
ICU
|
Case Series (Retro-spective Observa-tional)
|
Blood and respiratory cultures
|
Not described
|
Tiri42
|
Terni, Italy
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observa-tional Cohort
|
MALDI-ToF MS
|
VITEK2; Immunochromatography for OXA-48-like, OXA-163, KPC, NDM, VIM
|
Kokkoris43
|
Athens, Greece
|
ICU
|
Case Series (Retro-spective Observatio-nal Cohort)
|
Blood specimen
|
NA
|
Perrotta44
|
FG, Italy
|
ICU
|
Case Report
|
NA
|
NA
|
Baiou45
|
Doha, Qatar
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Case-Control
|
MALDI-ToF MS
|
BD Phoenix according to CLSI standards
|
Segrelles-Calvo46
|
Madrid, Spain
|
ICU, RICU
|
Prospective Observa-tional Cohort
|
Aspergillus galactomannan antigen on BAL
|
Not described
|
Martinez-Guerra47
|
Mexico City, Mexico
|
COVID-19 dedicated facility
|
Prospective Cohort
|
MALDI-Tof MS
|
VITEK2; AmpC producers considered with known chromosomal AmpC Beta-Lactamases, ESBL considered in those resistant to 3rd generation cephalosporins and monobactams, CRE considered with resistance to carbapenems in VITEK and confirmed with modified CIM test, MDR P. aeruginosa considered in isolates with resistance to at least one agent in three or more antibiotic categories
|
Karruli48
|
Naples, Italy
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observa-tional Cohort
|
Microbiological sampling of blood, urine, and airways
|
MDR defined according to Magiorakos et al.49 criteria
|
Gomez-Simmonds50
|
New York City, USA
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observational Cohort
|
Surveillance using MicroScan
|
Xpert Carba-R, BMD, E-test, WGS
|
Cultrera51
|
Ferrara, Italy
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observational Cohort
|
MALDI-ToF MS
|
VITEK2
|
Khurana52
|
New Delhi, India
|
COVID-19 dedicated facility
|
Retro-spective Observational Cohort
|
VITEK2 and BioFire FilmArray Respiratory Panel
|
VITEK2 AST card interpreted by CLSI guidelines
|
Posteraro36
|
Rome, Italy
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observa-tional Cohort
|
Positive blood culture using BacT/ALERT VIRTUO and MALDI Biotyper
|
VITEK2 and Sensititre YeastOne® following EUCAST breakpoints
|
Pascale53
|
Bologna, Italy
|
ICU and non-ICU settings
|
Cross-Sectional
|
Active surveillance of blood and respiratory cultures
|
CRE defined as per EUCAST criteria; WGS
|
Baskaran54
|
England
|
ICU
|
Multicentre Retro--spective Observa-tional Cohort
|
Standard culture, respiratory viral PCR and urinary antigen tests
|
NA
|
Moretti55
|
Brussels, Belgium
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observational Cohort
|
Endotracheal aspiration or BAL with > 105 and >104 CFU/mL
|
Not described. MDR or extreme-drug resistant (XDR) based on European Center of Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC)
|
Grasselli56
|
Genoa, Italy
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observa-tional Cohort
|
Routine microbiological surveillance: perineal swabs, nasal swabs, tracheal aspirate, urine culture
|
Not described
|
Magnasco57
|
Genoa, Italy
|
ICU
|
Retro-spective Observa-tional Cross-Sectional
|
Blood, respiratory and urinary samples using VITEK MS
|
VITEK2; Sensititre YeastOne® Panel (antifungal)
|
Bentivegna58
|
Rome, Italy
|
COVID-19 Depart-ment
|
Case-Control
|
NA
|
NA
|
Suarez-de-la-Rica59
|
Madrid, Spain
|
CCU
|
Retro-spective Observational Cohort
|
Conventional culture
|
Not described
|
Abbreviations: Bronchoalveolar Lavage (BAL), Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI), Critical Care Unit (CCU), European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST), intensive care unit (ICU), multi-drug resistant (MDR), matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS), polymerase chain reaction (PCR), whole-genome sequencing (WGS), carbapenem resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB), respiratory intensive care unit (RICU), real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), oropharyngeal candidiasis (OPC). |
Twelve (32%) articles documented the use of matrix-associated laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-ToF MS) as a method of organism identification, whereas 26 (68%) articles did not report microbiological investigations beyond specimen type (e.g., blood culture, respiratory culture etc.) and basic culturing (blood agar plate, chocolate agar plate etc.). Three studies had no description of microbiological investigations whatsoever (Table 1). Antimicrobial resistance definitions varied across studies, with the majority of articles not explicitly defining resistance, hence the authors’ final interpretation of resistance per isolate was used. One study reported multi-drug resistant categorization according to the Germany Society for Hygiene and Microbiology18. Details of antimicrobial susceptibility testing varied across studies, with 13 (34%) articles documenting use of standardized protocols. Seven articles followed CLSI criteria whereas 6 articles followed the EUCAST interpretive criteria. Moreover, reporting of resistance mechanisms were poor, with many reporting both acquired and intrinsic resistance as resistance (Table 2).
Table 2
Proportion of COVID-19 patients with resistant co-infections.
First Author
|
Disease Presentation
|
Patients Screened (No.)
|
SARS-CoV-2 Patients (No.)
|
Number of Patients with Co-Infections (%)*
|
Number of Patients with Resistant Co-Infections (%)*
|
Chowdhary27
|
BSI
|
596
|
596
|
15 (2.5%)
|
10 (1.7%)
|
Bogossian33
|
COVID-19
|
75
|
69
|
24 (34%)
|
23 (33%)
|
Ramadan28
|
COVID-19
|
260
|
260
|
28 (11%)
|
28 (11%)
|
Amarsy34
|
BSI, Respiratory Distress
|
96
|
95
|
4 (45 %)
|
4 (4%)
|
Perez20
|
VAP, VAP with bacteremia, bacteremia, bone or soft tissue infections
|
34
|
17
|
17 (100%)
|
17 (100%)
|
Salehi23
|
OPC
|
1059
|
1059
|
53 (5.0%)
|
2 (0.2%)
|
Cataldo35
|
BSI
|
57
|
57
|
28 (49%)
|
9 (16%)
|
Posteraro36
|
79M with complicated T2DM who had fever, necrotic and ulcerative lesions on the amputated leg stump, BSI
|
1
|
1
|
1 (100%)
|
1 (100%)
|
Nori4
|
COVID-19 and subsequent positive microbiological results (within 30 days)
|
4267
|
4267
|
152 (3.6%)
|
25 (0.6%) †
|
Mahmoudi37
|
COVID-19 patients assessed for bacterial infections
|
340
|
340
|
43 (13%)
|
31 (72%)
|
Li38
|
Lung, BSI and UTI
|
1495
|
1495
|
102 (6.8%)
|
102 (6.8 %)‡
|
Contou19
|
All microbiological investigations performed within the first 48 hrs of ICU admission were reviewed
|
92
|
92
|
26 (28%)
|
7 (8%)§
|
Mo39
|
COVID-19 patients who received Tocilizumab
|
617
|
38
|
15 (39%)
|
11 (29%)
|
Garcia-Menino9
|
Suspected or confirmed COVID-19 Patients
|
62
|
62
|
7 (11%)
|
7 (11%)
|
Sharifipour21
|
COVID-19 Patients
|
19
|
19
|
19 (100%)
|
17 (89%)
|
Walpole40
|
33M with fever for 3 days, abdominal pain for 1 day and one episode of vomiting
|
1
|
1
|
1 (100%)
|
1 (100%)
|
Razazi11
|
Viral ARDS
|
3821
|
90
|
NA
|
21 (23%)
|
Guisado-Gil18
|
Hospital-acquired Candidemia and MDR BSI
|
282
|
282
|
NA¶
|
NA¶
|
Montrucchio41
|
COVID patients screened for carbapenemase-producing K. pneumoniae
|
35
|
7
|
6 (86%)
|
6 (86%)
|
Mady24
|
COVID-19 patients with ARDS receiving tocilizumab
|
61
|
61
|
12 (20%)
|
3 (5%)
|
Tiri42
|
Patients admitted to ICU screened using rectal swabs or clinical cultures for CRE
|
62
|
62
|
17 (27%)
|
17 (27%)
|
Perrotta44
|
57M admitted to hematology with K. pneumoniae NDM sepsis
|
1
|
1
|
1 (100%)
|
1 (100%)
|
Baiou45
|
Critical COVID-19 Patients
|
1231
|
234
|
78 (6%)
|
NA
|
Segrelles-Calvo46
|
Adult patients admitted to ICU or RICU
|
215
|
215
|
7 (3%)
|
NA
|
Martinez-Guerra47
|
Severe COVID-19 patients
|
794
|
794
|
74 (11%)
|
127 (20%)††
|
Karruli48
|
Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients
|
32
|
32
|
NA/32
|
16 (50%)
|
Gomez-Simmonds50
|
Secondary CPE infections in COVID-19 patients
|
3152
|
3152
|
NA
|
13 (0.4%)
|
Cultrera51
|
COVID-19 patients admitted in ICU and non-COVID-19 ICU settings
|
NA
|
NA
|
28
|
NA
|
Khurana52
|
Severely ill COVID-19 patients
|
1179
|
1179
|
151 (13%)
|
105 (9%)
|
Posteraro60
|
BSI in COVID-19 patients
|
293
|
293
|
46 (16%)
|
12 (5%)
|
Pascale53
|
>18 years admitted to ICU
|
1151
|
1151
|
NA/1151
|
23 (1.8%)
|
Baskaran54
|
COVID-19 patients in ICU
|
579
|
254
|
83 (33%)
|
NA/254
|
Moretti55
|
Patients with COVID-19 and VAP
|
39
|
39
|
21 (54%)
|
67%#
|
Grasselli56
|
Patients with COVID-19 pneumonia
|
813
|
813
|
359 (44%)
|
38%**
|
Magnasco57
|
Patients with severe COVID-19
|
118
|
118
|
NA/118
|
14 (12%)
|
Bentivegna58
|
Patients in COVID-19 Departments
|
NA
|
NA
|
NA/NA
|
150/NA
|
Suarez-de-la-Rica59
|
Mechanically ventilated critically ill COVID-19 patients
|
107
|
107
|
46 (43%)
|
17 (16%)
|
Kokkoris43
|
BSI in COVID-19 patients
|
50
|
50
|
27 (54%)
|
17 (34%)‡‡
|
TOTAL
|
|
23,086
|
16,602
|
|
|
Abbreviations: BSI (blood stream infection), VAP (ventilator-associated pneumonia), OPC (oropharyngeal candidiasis), MDR (multi-drug resistant), T2DM (type II diabetes mellitus), UTI (urinary tract infection), ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome), CRE (carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae), RICU (Respiratory Intermediate Care Unit) |
*Denominator: Patients with SARS-CoV-2 |
†24 organisms resistant; no patient level data provided |
‡159 organisms detected; no patient level data provided; however, all resistant |
§7 organisms resistant to 3rd generation cephalosporins and amoxicillin-clavulanate, no patient level data |
¶Rates of MDR BSIs |
#67% of 27 organisms isolated were MDR, 1 was XDR |
**272/723 microbiologically confirmed hospital acquired infections were MDR |
††19.3% (127/656) episodes of hospital-acquired infections demonstrated resistance |
‡‡34% (17/50) were reported as extensively drug-resistant, pan-drug resistant or resistant |
In total, 16,602 (72%) of 23,086 patients had laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. The proportion of co-infection with either bacterial or fungal organisms in those with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 ranged from 2.5 to 100% across the 35 studies with exclusion of the single case reports. (Table 2). There were no reports of parasitic co-infections. Moreover, 1 case of viral co-infection was captured by our search strategy. One study evaluated viral co-infections using the Cepheid Xpert Xpress Flu/RSV, Panel Pneumonia Plus Film away and Panel RP2 plus Film array and found no cases of viral co-infection in 68 patients, whereas another detected metapneumovirus using the Biofire Film Array19. Two cohort studies20,21 reported co-infection prevalence of 100%. In contrast, 8 studies4,11,22,23 (with sample sizes greater than 1000) reported prevalence of co-infection from 3.6 to 13%.
The range of those co-infected with a resistant organism was 0.2 to 100%, with the 4 cohort studies20,21 contributing to the higher limit as previously mentioned (Table 2). Studies with larger sample sizes (>1000) had resistant co-infection estimates ranging from 0.2 to 9%. In 15 studies where blood stream infections, acute respiratory distress syndrome or ventilator-associated pneumonia was reported, total resistant co-infections ranged from 1.7 to 100%. Seven studies reported both bacterial and fungal infections in COVID-19 patients. Notably, one study evaluated 61 patients who received tocilizumab, of whom 3 (5.0%) had resistant bacterial co-infections24.
The pooled prevalence of co-infection with resistant bacterial and fungal organisms was 24% (95% CI: 8-40%; n=25 studies: I2=99%) and 0.3% (95% CI: 0.1-0.6%; n=8 studies: I2=78%) respectively (Figures 2A and 2B). Between-study heterogeneity across bacterial and fungal resistant co-infections was high. Stratified meta-analysis by ICU setting among resistant bacterial infections revealed that the overall proportion of resistant infections amongst COVID19 patients was higher in the ICU setting (n=19) [0.27 (95% CI: 0.08, 0.46)] compared to the non-ICU settings (n=6) [0.14 (95% CI: 0.08, 0.20)], although not significant (Figure 3). Furthermore, comparison between regular ICU or hospital settings (n= 22) to COVID-specific ICUs (n=3) showed a similar trend ([0.25 (95% CI: 0.07, 0.42)] vs. 0.19 [0.14 (95% CI: 0.07, 0.22)]) [see Additional File 5] Moreover, a stratified analysis was performed by geography whereby the prevalence of resistant bacterial infections in studies conducted outside Europe [0.19 (95% CI: 0.14, 0.24)] was higher, particularly in Asia [0.21 (95% CI: 0.15, 0.28)] and more prominent in North America [0.29 (95% CI: 0.00, 0.72)] although not significant [Figure 4, Additional files 6-7]. Again, statistical heterogeneity remained high across all stratified analyses.
There were 1959 unique organisms identified across 37 studies where data were available, with 569 (29%) organisms identified as resistant to one or more antimicrobials (Table 3). The most common Gram-negative organisms resistant to at least one antimicrobial (regardless of intrinsic resistance) were Klebsiella pneumoniae (n=169), Acinetobacter baumannii (n=148), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n=65), Escherichia coli (n=43), Enterobacter cloacae (n=29), Stenotrophomonas maltophilia (n=24) and Serratia marcescens (n=17). Wide-spread resistance mechanisms were documented including β-lactamases, carbapenemases, and extended spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs). The most common resistant Gram-positive organisms included: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) (n=132), coagulase-negative staphylococci (n=30) and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE) spp. (n=10). More specifically, isolates of E. faecium were documented with high levels of vancomycin resistance. Resistance to at least one antifungal agent was also documented, including Candida auris (n=10), C. albicans (n=3) and unidentified Candida spp. (n=5).
Table 3
Co-infecting organisms and resistance profiles.
Organism
|
Number
|
Proportion Resistant
|
Resistance Phenotype
|
Gram-positives
|
|
|
|
Staphylococcus aureus
|
2
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA)
|
104
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
|
132
|
132 (100%)
|
Methicillin resistance
|
Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS)
|
99
|
30
|
Unknown resistance (24)
|
Vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), unspecified
|
4
|
4 (100%)
|
Vancomycin resistance
|
Enterococcus faecalis
|
29
|
1 (3%)
|
High-level aminoglycoside resistance
|
Enterococcus faecium
|
33
|
6 (18%)
|
Vancomycin resistance (3); high-level aminoglycoside resistance (3), ampicillin resistance (1)
|
Enterococcus casseliflavus/Enterococcus gallinarum
|
2
|
1 (50%)*
|
Vancomycin resistance (1 – E. gallinarum)*
|
Enterococcus spp.
|
12
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Streptococcus pneumoniae
|
15
|
3 (20%)
|
Amoxicillin, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, cefoxitin, gentamicin, erythromycin, clindamycin, piperacillin/tazobactam, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (2); amikacin, ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, ceftazidime, cefepime (1), unknown resistance (1)
|
Streptococcus spp.
|
4
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Clostridium difficile
|
7
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Gram-negatives
|
|
|
|
Acinetobacter baumannii
|
218
|
148 (68%)
|
Wide-spread resistance except to colistin (98); 26 isolates harbored OXA-23, 2 harbored NDM; Carbapenem resistance (4); extensively resistant (5), pan-drug resistant (3), unknown resistance (19)
|
Klebsiella pneumoniae
|
274
|
169 (62%)
|
26 (carbapenem-producing KPC), OXA-48 (7), ESBL (13), NDM (1), multi-drug resistant (23), Carbapenem resistance (13), KPC-2 (1), KPC-3 (1), unknown resistance (25), VIM (1)
|
Klebsiella oxytoca
|
5
|
2 (40%)
|
ESBL (2)
|
Klebsiella aerogenes
|
4
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Klebsiella spp.
|
9
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Pseudomonas spp.
|
4
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
|
203
|
65 (25%)
|
Unknown resistance (34), piperacillin/tazobactam (4), carbapenems (18), MDR (6), cephalosporin resistance (1), XDR (1)
|
Serratia marcescens
|
18
|
17 (94%)
|
Resistance to amoxicillin, amoxicillin/-clavulanic acid, 1st and 2nd generation cephalosporins (including AmpC B-lactamase) with low level of resistance to amikacin, multi-drug resistant (7)
|
Escherichia coli
|
118
|
43 (36%)
|
ESBL (2), AmpC resistance (1), multi-drug resistant (12), unknown resistance (18)
|
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
|
60
|
24 (40%)
|
Multidrug resistant (24)
|
Proteus mirabilis
|
5
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Proteus putida
|
1
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Haemophilus influenzae
|
7
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Moraxella catarrhalis
|
1
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Enterobacteriaceae, unspecified
|
5
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Yersinia enterocolitica
|
1
|
1 (100%)
|
Amoxicillin and amoxicillin/-clavulanic acid resistance
|
Enterobacter spp.
|
8
|
5 (63%)
|
Imipenem resistance
|
Enterobacter aerogenes
|
8
|
8 (100%)
|
Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (1), ESBL (1), AmpC B lactamase (6), unknown resistance (1)
|
Enterobacter cloacae
|
68
|
29 (43%)
|
AmpC B lactamase (7), multi-drug resistant (18), NDM-1 (2)
|
Elizabethkingia meningoseptica
|
1
|
1 (100%)
|
Multi-drug resistant (1)
|
Chryseobacterium gleum
|
1
|
1 (100%)
|
Multi-drug resistant (1)
|
Citrobacter koseri
|
1
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
|
2
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Enterobacterales
|
113
|
34 (30%)
|
Cephalosporin resistance (2); Carbapenem resistance (3), unknown resistance (29)
|
Bacteroides fragilis
|
2
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Viral Organisms
|
|
|
|
Metapneumovirus
|
1
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Fungal Organisms
|
|
|
|
Candida auris
|
11
|
10 (91%)
|
Fluconazole resistance (10), Voriconazole non-susceptible (3); overall 3 multi-azole resistant (fluconazole + voriconazole), 7 multi-drug resistant including 3 to 3 classes of drugs (azoles, amphotericin B and 5-flucytosine) and 4 resistant to 2 classes of drugs (azoles + 5-flucytosine and azoles + amphotericin B)
|
Candida albicans
|
88
|
3 (3%)
|
Fluconazole and voriconazole resistance (3); caspofungin intermediate (2)
|
Candida dubliniensis
|
6
|
2 (33%)
|
Fluconazole resistance (1), caspofungin resistance (1)
|
Candida parapsilosis
|
25
|
1 (4%)
|
Fluconazole resistance
|
Candida glabrata
|
15
|
1 (7%)
|
Pan-echinocandin resistance (1), caspofungin intermediate (7)
|
Candida spp.
|
22
|
5 (23%)
|
Azole resistance (5); Echinocandin resistance (1)
|
Pichia kudriavzevii
|
1
|
1 (100%)
|
Caspofungin and fluconazole resistance
|
Aspergillus fumigatus
|
3
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Aspergillus flavus
|
7
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Aspergillus niger
|
2
|
0 (0%)
|
-
|
Other
|
73
|
20 (27%)
|
Unknown resistance (9), ESBL (11)
|
*Intrinsic resistance |
Clinical data for 112 patients were available from 12 studies, of which sex and age were documented for 72. Fifty-two (72%) patients were male with a median age of 65 years (range 25 – 86) [see Additional file 8]. Sixty-five (80%) had co-morbidities present, with all but 3 patients receiving antimicrobials prior to identification and susceptibility testing of co-infecting organisms for which data were available. Sixteen (45%) patients received tocilizumab, 13 (20%) patients received a combination of steroids and tocilizumab and 37 (56%) received a combination of other drugs. Sixty of 67 (90%) patients were receiving mechanical ventilation with a median duration of 34 days (range 24 – 46 days). All but 20 patients (colonization) had a co-infecting organism as the cause of their disease presentation in addition to COVID-19. The most commonly identified organisms were: A. baumannii (n=38), K. pneumoniae (n=29), C. auris (n=11), P. aeruginosa (n=7), MRSA (n=3), Aspergillus fumigatus (n=3), A. flavus (n=2), A. niger (n=2), E. cloacae complex (n=2) and MSSA (n=2). S. maltophilia, K. oxytoca, Y. enterocolitica, P. aeruginosa and C. glabrata were documented in 1 patient each. Mixed infections were documented in 5 patients: P. aeruginosa, C. auris; P. aeruginosa, C. auris, VRE; A. baumannii, K. pneumoniae in 2 patients; MRSA and C. albicans. All organisms acquired resistance to at least one antimicrobial except for 10 cases pertaining to 1) MSSA, 2) mixed infection with A. baumannii and K. pneumoniae, 3), K. pneumoniae, 4) A. fumigatus (n=3), 5) A. flavus (n=2), and 6) A. niger (n=2). Overall, mortality was documented in 58 (52%) patients with all but 6 infected with resistant organisms.