Shiga Toxin-Associated Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome in Adults, France, 2009-2017

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Institution
Title
Shiga Toxin-Associated Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome in Adults, France, 2009-2017
Journal
Emerg Infect Dis
Author(s)
Travert B., Dossier A., Jamme M., Cointe A., Delmas Y., Malot S., Wynckel A., Seguin A., Presne C., Hie M., Benhamou Y., Ribes D., Choukroun G., Grange S., Hertig A., Le Gall E. C., Galicier L., Daugas E., Bouadma L., Weill F. X., Azoulay E., Fakhouri F., Veyradier A., Bonacorsi S., Hogan J., Fremeaux-Bacchi V., Rondeau E., Mariani-Kurkdjian P., Coppo P., Centre de Reference des Microangiopathies Thrombotiques
ISSN
1080-6059 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1080-6040
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2021
Volume
27
Number
7
Pages
1876-1885
Language
english
Notes
Travert, Benoit
Dossier, Antoine
Jamme, Matthieu
Cointe, Aurelie
Delmas, Yahsou
Malot, Sandrine
Wynckel, Alain
Seguin, Amelie
Presne, Claire
Hie, Miguel
Benhamou, Ygal
Ribes, David
Choukroun, Gabriel
Grange, Steven
Hertig, Alexandre
Le Gall, Emilie Cornec
Galicier, Lionel
Daugas, Eric
Bouadma, Lila
Weill, Francois-Xavier
Azoulay, Elie
Fakhouri, Fadi
Veyradier, Agnes
Bonacorsi, Stephane
Hogan, Julien
Fremeaux-Bacchi, Veronique
Rondeau, Eric
Mariani-Kurkdjian, Patricia
Coppo, Paul
eng
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Emerg Infect Dis. 2021;27(7):1876-1885. doi: 10.3201/eid2707.204638.
Abstract
We conducted a retrospective study on hemolytic uremic syndrome caused by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) in 96 adults enrolled in the cohort of the National Reference Center for Thrombotic Microangiopathies network in France during 2009-2017. Most infections were caused by STEC strains not belonging to the O157 or O104 serogroups. Thirty (31.3%) patients had multiple risk factors for thrombotic microangiopathy. In total, 61 (63.5%) patients required dialysis, 50 (52.1%) had a serious neurologic complication, 34 (35.4%) required mechanical ventilation, and 19 (19.8%) died during hospitalization. We used multivariate analysis to determine that the greatest risk factors for death were underlying immunodeficiency (hazard ratio 3.54) and severe neurologic events (hazard ratio 3.40). According to multivariate analysis and propensity score-matching, eculizumab treatment was not associated with survival. We found that underlying conditions, especially immunodeficiency, are strongly associated with decreased survival in adults who have hemolytic uremic syndrome caused by STEC.
Keywords
Adult, *Escherichia coli Infections, France, *Hemolytic-Uremic Syndrome, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Shiga Toxin, *Shiga-Toxigenic Escherichia coli, *E. coli, *Escherichia coli, *France, *hus, *stec, *Shiga toxin, *Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli, *bacteria, *enteric infections, *food safety, *food-borne infections, *hemolytic uremic syndrome, *thrombotic microangiopathy
Pubmed
Create date
01/03/2022 11:17
Last modification date
25/01/2024 8:37
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