Retrospective Cohort Study Open Access
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Dec 7, 2020; 26(45): 7191-7203
Published online Dec 7, 2020. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v26.i45.7191
High mortality associated with gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infection in liver transplant recipients undergoing immunosuppression reduction
Fang Chen, Xiao-Yun Pang, Department of Pharmacy, Renji Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai 200127, China
Chuan Shen, Long-Zhi Han, Xiao-Song Chen, Jian-Jun Zhang, Qiang Xia, Yong-Bing Qian, Department of Liver Surgery, Renji Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai 200127, China
Yu-Xiao Deng, Department of Critical Care Medicine, Renji Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai 200127, China
ORCID number: Fang Chen (0000-0002-7941-9802); Xiao-Yun Pang (0000-0003-0202-6290); Chuan Shen (0000-0002-1317-8866); Long-Zhi Han (0000-0003-4403-0909); Yu-Xiao Deng (0000-0003-2401-1495); Xiao-Song Chen (0000-0003-4540-7317); Jian-Jun Zhang (0000-0002-9853-3416); Qiang Xia (0000-0001-9482-6951); Yong-Bing Qian (0000-0003-4081-428x).
Author contributions: Chen F and Qian YB designed the study; Pang XY, Shen C, Han LZ, Chen XS, Zhang JJ, and Deng YX participated in the acquisition, analysis, and interpretation of the data; Chen F, Qian YB, and Deng YX drafted the initial manuscript; Zhang JJ, Xia Q, and Qian YB revised the article critically for important intellectual content.
Supported by the National Key R&D Precision Medicine Program, No. 2017YFC0908100; and Shanghai Key Clinical Specialty Grant, No. Shslczdzk05801.
Institutional review board statement: The study was reviewed and approved by Renji Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine Review Board (Approval No. KY2019-160).
Informed consent statement: The informed consent was waived by the ethics committee.
Conflict-of-interest statement: All authors declare no conflicts of interest regarding the conduct and publication of this study.
Data sharing statement: No additional data are available.
STROBE statement: The authors have read the STROBE Statement-checklist of items, and the manuscript was prepared and revised according to the STROBE Statement-checklist of items.
Open-Access: This article is an open-access article that was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/Licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Corresponding author: Yong-Bing Qian, MD, Associate Professor, Department of Liver Surgery, Renji Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiaotong University, No. 1630 Dongfang Road, Shanghai 200127, China. qianyb79@hotmail.com
Received: September 17, 2020
Peer-review started: September 17, 2020
First decision: October 17, 2020
Revised: October 30, 2020
Accepted: November 9, 2020
Article in press: November 9, 2020
Published online: December 7, 2020

Abstract
BACKGROUND

Immunosuppression is an important factor in the incidence of infections in transplant recipient. Few studies are available on the management of immunosuppression (IS) treatment in the liver transplant (LT) recipients complicated with infection. The aim of this study is to describe our experience in the management of IS treatment during bacterial bloodstream infection (BSI) in LT recipients and assess the effect of temporary IS withdrawal on 30 d mortality of recipients presenting with severe infection.

AIM

To assess the effect of temporary IS withdrawal on 30 d mortality of LT recipients presenting with severe infection.

METHODS

A retrospective study was conducted with patients diagnosed with BSI after LT in the Department of Liver Surgery, Renji Hospital from January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2017. All recipients diagnosed with BSI after LT were included. Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis of risk factors for 30 d mortality was conducted in the LT recipients with Gram-negative bacterial (GNB) infection.

RESULTS

Seventy-four episodes of BSI were identified in 70 LT recipients, including 45 episodes of Gram-positive bacterial (GPB) infections in 42 patients and 29 episodes of GNB infections in 28 patients. Overall, IS reduction (at least 50% dose reduction or cessation of one or more immunosuppressive agent) was made in 28 (41.2%) cases, specifically, in 5 (11.9%) cases with GPB infections and 23 (82.1%) cases with GNB infections. The 180 d all-cause mortality rate was 18.5% (13/70). The mortality rate in GNB group (39.3%, 11/28) was significantly higher than that in GPB group (4.8%, 2/42) (P = 0.001). All the deaths in GNB group were attributed to worsening infection secondary to IS withdrawal, but the deaths in GPB group were all due to graft-versus-host disease. GNB group was associated with significantly higher incidence of intra-abdominal infection, IS reduction, and complete IS withdrawal than GPB group (P < 0.05). Cox regression showed that rejection (adjusted hazard ratio 7.021, P = 0.001) and complete IS withdrawal (adjusted hazard ratio 12.65, P = 0.019) were independent risk factors for 30 d mortality in patients with GNB infections after LT.

CONCLUSION

IS reduction is more frequently associated with GNB infection than GPB infection in LT recipients. Complete IS withdrawal should be cautious due to increased risk of mortality in LT recipients complicated with BSI.

IS
Key Words: Immunosuppressive therapy, Liver transplantation, Bloodstream infection, Multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacterium

Core Tip: Bacterial infections are the most common infectious complication after liver transplantation (LT). Immunosuppression (IS) reduction is usually needed in case of bacterial infections in LT recipients. However, we do not know exactly the incidence of IS reduction during bloodstream infection after LT and its effect on patient outcome. This single-center analysis summarized the IS reduction data in 70 LT recipients. We found IS reduction is more frequently associated with Gram-negative bacterial infection than Gram-positive bacterial infection in LT recipients. Complete withdrawal of IS should be done cautiously due to increased risk of mortality.



INTRODUCTION

Bacterial infections continue to be the most common infectious complication after liver transplantation (LT), usually within 2 mo after LT[1]. Bloodstream infections (BSI) account for 19%-46% of all major infections after LT[2-5] and are associated with a mortality rate of nearly 40%[6].

Several factors are known to be associated with BSI after LT in adults, including intraoperative blood loss, intraoperative transfusion, retransplantation, longer duration of catheterization, and biliary complication. Immunosuppression (IS) is the single most important factor contributing to the incidence of infections in transplant recipients[7]. The commonly used immunosuppressive agents after LT include calcineurin inhibitor, such as tacrolimus (0.1-0.15 mg/kg/d in 2 doses) or ciclosporin (6-8 mg/kg/d in 2 doses), mycophenolate mofetil (500-1000 mg, bid), sirolimus (2 mg/d), and corticosteroids (induction with high dose methylprednisolone 500-1000 mg intravenously, followed by tapering over 5 d to maintenance with prednisone 5-20 mg/d). The management of IS therapy during infection after LT is highly controversial, although IS reduction (partially discontinue or reduce the dosage of at least one IS agent) or complete withdrawal may be a generally accepted option in life-threatening infections. To date, only few studies have assessed the impact of IS reduction or complete withdrawal of immunosuppressive therapy on infection outcomes in LT recipients[8,9]. In these studies, researchers reported that immunosuppressive agents may be discontinued completely in kidney transplantation recipients since hemodialysis is an effective option in case of rejection. In contrast, complete discontinuation of IS is highly dangerous in liver transplantation because it may lead to graft loss and patient death.

This study aimed to examine the management of immunosuppressive therapy during bacterial BSI in LT recipients in the Department of Liver Surgery, Renji Hospital during a 2-year period and the effect of temporary IS withdrawal on 30 d mortality of recipients presenting with severe infection.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study design and population

A retrospective single-center observational cohort study was conducted in the LT recipients diagnosed with BSI in Department of Liver Surgery, Renji Hospital from January 2016 through December 2017. Overall, 1297 LT recipients were identified, including 786 children (650 Living donors and 136 deceased donors) and 511 adults. All the enrolled LT recipients satisfied the inclusion criteria: (1) 18 to 75 years of age; and (2) With diagnosis of bloodstream infection confirmed by blood culture. The patients were excluded if infection was localized or in the brain or patients died on the day of surgery. Seventy patients with 74 episodes of BSI were eligible for inclusion in this analysis. All donor organs registered in the database were donated voluntarily. No donor organs were obtained from executed prisoners.

Patient charts and in-hospital records were carefully reviewed to collect study variables and fill in the pre-determined case reports. The researchers systematically checked the integrity of the data before importing it into the database. The follow-up period was at least 180 d after the onset of index BSI. The study was carried out in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by our institutional review board (Approval No. KY2019-160).

Antimicrobial prophylaxis

The perioperative prophylactic antimicrobial therapy included intravenous ampicillin (120 mg/kg/d, q6h) and cefotaxime (120 mg/kg/d, q6h) within 1 h before LT and lasting for 3-5 d. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) nasal colonization was routinely screened when the patient was included on transplant waiting list and transferred to liver intensive care unit after the operation. Alternative regimen including vancomycin may be considered for the patients with a history of MRSA infection or colonization. The surgeon may modify the prophylactic regimen according to the history of infectious disease based on the experience of our center. Oral acyclovir or valganciclovir after intravenous ganciclovir was administered for prevention of cytomegalovirus. Antiviral prophylaxis and hepatitis B immunoglobulin therapy were given to the patients undergoing LT for managing hepatitis B cirrhosis. Routine antifungal prophylaxis was only applicable to the patients at high risk of invasive aspergillosis or candidiasis, as described elsewhere[10].

Immunosuppression strategy

Standard IS regimens include high-dose prednisone and basiliximab induction, followed by tacrolimus, mycophenolic acid, and prednisone. For the patients with unremarkable post-transplant process, steroids were withdrawn 3-6 mo after LT. A mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor was added to the treatment regimen after the first month of transplantation if patients were at risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. Liver biopsy was performed in case of elevated transaminases or laboratory results indicative of unexplained cholestasis.

The target serum level of tacrolimus was 8-12 ng/mL during the first month of LT and 6-8 ng/mL during the first 6 mo of LT. The target serum level of cyclosporin was 200-250 mg/mL during the first month and 150-200 mg/mL in the first 6 mo of LT.

Definitions

BSI was defined as the isolation of pathogenic microorganisms from at least one blood culture specimen. Positive blood culture from two separate sites was required for the skin flora associated with contamination. Polymicrobial BSI was defined as two or more microorganisms isolated from the same one blood culture specimen. Intra-abdominal infections include peritonitis, peritoneal abscess, and cholangitis occurring more than 30 d after surgery. BSI was classified as secondary BSI when the pathogens from blood sample originated from the infection in other body site.

BSI source was determined according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention criteria[11] and considered as primary source when no identifiable source was available.

Multi-drug resistance (MDR) was defined as acquired non-susceptibility to at least one agent in three or more antimicrobial classes. Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae was defined by current Center for Disease Control and Prevention criteria as Enterobacteriaceae strains resistant to at least one carbapenem. For all the Gram-negative isolates, carbapenemase production (Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase, New Delhi metallo-b-lactamase, OXA-23, and OXA-51) was confirmed by simplex ‘in-house’ polymerase chain reaction assays with specific primers, including: blaKPc-related sequences (5‘-TCTGGACCGCTGGGAGCTGG-3’, forward and 5’-TGCCCGTTGACGCCCAATCC-3’, reverse); blaOXA-23-related sequences (5’-GATCGGATTGGAGAACCAGA-3’, forward and 5’-ATTTCTGACCGCA-TTTCCAT-3‘, reverse), and blaNDM-related sequences 5’-GGTTTGGCGATCTGGTTTTC-3’, forward and 5’-CGGAATGGCTCATCACGATC-3’, reverse). Community-acquired BSI was defined as when positive blood culture was taken within 48 h since hospital admission. Hospital acquired BSI was defined as a positive blood culture obtained from patients who had been hospitalized for 48 h or longer.

For the management of immunosuppressive therapy during BSI episodes, we recorded the changes of index blood culture over a period of 7-10 d. Changes of immunosuppressive therapy were classified as follows: (1) IS was withdrawn completely when all immunosuppressive drugs were discontinued simultaneously; (2) IS therapy was partially discontinued when at least one immunosuppressive drug (steroids, calcineurin inhibitors, or mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors) was discontinued; (3) IS was reduced when the dosage of at least one immunosuppressive drug was reduced by a minimum of 50%; and (4) IS reduction was defined as at least one of the above situations.

Data collection

All relevant data were collected from the enrolled patients, including demographic data, etiology of liver disease, biopsy-confirmed rejection or medical interventions for elevated liver transaminase, and/or re-transplantation within 90 d after BSI. BSI data included the pathogenic bacterial isolates and their susceptibility patterns, empiric antibiotic treatment, as well as appropriateness and duration of antibiotic treatment. IS data included the dosage, serum level of immunosuppressive agents, and time and duration of discontinuation.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis was performed using the SPSS Advanced Statistics Modules, version 20.0 (SPSS, Armonk, NY, United States). Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to determine the effect of MDR infection on patient survival after LT. The normally distributed continuous variables were expressed as mean ± standard deviation and compared by Student's t-test. All other non-normally distributed continuous data were presented as median [interquartile range (IQR)] and compared by Mann-Whitney U-test.

Univariate analysis was applied to determine the risk factors for 30 d mortality in LT recipients with BSI. Only the variables showing P < 0.10 in the univariate analysis were tested in multivariate analysis. Stepwise variable logistic regression model was utilized to identify the independent risk factors for 30 d mortality of Gram-negative bacterial (GNB) infections.

RESULTS

A total of 74 episodes of BSI were identified in 70 LT recipients in the 2-year period. Most of the patients (53, 75.7%) were males with a median (IQR) age of 48 (40-51) years. The etiology of liver disease was mainly hepatitis B virus-related cirrhosis (33/70, 47.1%) and hepatocellular carcinoma (20/70, 28.6%) (Table 1). The 74 episodes of BSI were classified into Gram-positive bacterial (GPB) infections (45 episodes in 42 patients) and GNB infections (29 episodes in 28 patients) based on the Gram staining of the pathogenic bacteria.

Table 1 Characteristics of liver transplant recipients with bloodstream infection in terms of bacterial pathogens, n (%).
Variable
Gram-positive BSI, n = 42
Gram-negative BSI, n = 28
P value
Age in yr, mean ± SD51.0 ± 10.547.66 ± 13.010.228
Female sex9 (21.4)8 (28.6)0.495
Etiology of liver transplant
Hepatocellular carcinoma13 (31.0)7 (25.0)0.589
Hepatitis B virus20 (47.6)13 (46.4)0.922
Others9 (21.4)8 (28.6)0.495
Baseline immunosuppressive treatment
Prednisone18 (42.9)12 (42.9)0.596
Tacrolimus31 (73.8)18 (64.3)0.833
Cyclosporin7 (16.7)5 (17.9)0.897
Mycophenolate mofetil35 (83.3)17 (60.7)0.034
BSI characteristics
Early BSI141 (97.6)26 (92.9)0.718
Septic shock04 (14.3)NA
BSI source, episodesn = 45n = 29
Primary10 (23.8)3 (10.7)0.318
Surgical wound20 (47.6)0NA
Biliary tract5 (11.9)7 (25.0)0.246
Urinary tract1 (2.4)6 (21.4)0.025
Central venous catheter2 (4.8)2 (7.1)0.649
Intra-abdominal1 (2.4)9 (32.1)0.001
Respiratory tract6 (14.3)5 (17.9)0.833
Management of infection
Empiric therapy31 (73.8)14 (50.0)0.126
Target therapy11 (26.2)12 (42.9)0.201
Source control2 (4.8)3 (10.7)0.608
Length of stay in d, median (IQR)18 (15-26.8)24.5 (18-39)0.055
From the day of transplantation to onset of BSI in d, median (IQR)4 (1-6)12 (8-41)0.048
Patient outcome
Died2 (4.8)11 (39.3)0.001
Suspected rejection23 (7.1)7 (25.0)0.081
Microbiological clearance43 (95.6)18 (62.1)0.001
IS reduction5 (11.9)23 (82.1)< 0.001
Complete IS withdrawal 3 (7.1)15 (53.6)< 0.001
Length of IS withdrawal in d6.3 (2-10)12.6 (4-25)0.171
Characteristics of BSI episodes

The median (IQR) time from LT to the onset of BSI was 6 (3-20) d. Majority (67, 90.5%) of the BSI episodes occurred within 180 d after LT and were hospital acquired (94.8%). The BSI source was surgical wound (47.6%), primary (23.8%), respiratory tract (14.3%), biliary tract (11.9%), central venous catheter (4.8%), urinary tract, and intra-abdominal (2.1%) in GPB group. Intra-abdominal infection (32.1%) was the primary site of BSI, followed by biliary tract (25.0%), urinary tract (21.4%), respiratory tract (17.9%), primary (10.7%), and central venous catheter (7.1%) in GNB group. GNB group showed numerically longer withdrawal time than GPB group (12.6 d vs 6.3 d) (Table 1).

The median (IQR) time from the day of transplantation (day 0) to onset of BSI was 4 (1-6) d in GPB group (n = 45) and 12 (8-41) d in GNB group (n = 29). The distribution of bacterial species is presented in Table 2. The isolates in GPB group included coagulase-negative Staphylococcus (n = 24), Enterococcus faecalis (n = 4), Staphylococcus aureus (n = 3), Enterococcus faecium (n = 4), and Streptococcus (n = 2). The pathogenic isolates in GNB group were mostly antibiotic resistant (n = 22, 75.9%). The etiological agents were Klebsiella pneumoniae (n = 11, including eight carbapenemase-producing strains and one pandrug resistant strain), Acinetobacter baumannii (n = 7, all carbapenemase-producing strains), Escherichia coli (n = 5, including two ESBL-producing strains and one extensively drug-resistant strain), and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n = 3, including two multi-drug resistant strains and one carbapenemase-producing strain).

Table 2 Distribution of the bacterial pathogens causing bloodstream infections in liver transplant recipients.
Gram stain
Bacterial species
n (%)
Resistant strain, n
Gram-positive, n = 45Enterococcus faecium4 (8.89)XDR, 1
Staphylococcus aureus3 (6.67)
Enterococcus faecalis4 (8.89)
Streptococcus2 (4.44)
Coagulase negative Staphylococcus24 (4.44)
Others8 (17.78)
Gram-negative, n = 29Klebsiella pneumoniae11 (37.93)CRKP, 8; PDR, 1
Acinetobacter baumannii7 (24.14)CRAB, 7
Escherichia coli5(17.24)ESBL, 2; XDR, 1
Pseudomonas aeruginosa3 (10.34)CRPA, 1; MDR, 2
Others3 (10.34)
Management of immunosuppressive therapy

IS reduction was found in 28 (41.2%) cases, specifically 5 cases (5/28, 17.9%) in GPB group and 23 cases in GNB group. As for GPB BSIs, dosage reduction was identified in 2 patients (all tacrolimus), and complete IS withdrawal in 3 patients. In the LT recipients with GNB BSIs, dosage reduction (tacrolimus, steroids, ciclosporin, and/or mycophenolate) was made in six patients. At least one immunosuppressive drug was discontinued in one patient. Both dosage reduction and discontinuation of at least one drug were identified in one patient. Complete IS withdrawal was found in 15 patients.

Outcome analysis

Fifty-seven patients completely recovered from infectious complications, including 40 (95.2%) in GPB group and 17 (60.7%) in GNB group. The 180 d all-cause mortality rate was 18.6% (13/70). The 2 deaths in GPB group were due to graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The 11 deaths in GNB group were attributed to worsening infection secondary to IS withdrawal. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed that the patients with MDR GNB infections had significantly lower 90 d survival rate than the patients without MDR GNB infections (50% vs 100%, log-rank test, P = 0.03) after onset of BSI.

Three patients (7.1%) developed suspected rejection episodes in GPB group, while seven patients (25%) developed rejection episodes in GNB group.

In patients with GNB infections, patients who died within 30 d of infection diagnosis showed a higher prevalence of rejection, a higher risk of Klebsiella pneumoniae infection, and a more frequent presentation with IS withdrawal; all of these differences reached statistical significance. No differences in the 30 d mortality were found, taking into account patient primary disease or based on the source of infection. In addition, there were no differences between the episodes in which the antimicrobials were used as empiric therapy or target therapy (Table 3).

Table 3 Relationship of clinical and therapeutic variables with outcomes in patients with Gram-negative bacterial infections, n (%).
Variable
30 d mortality, n = 11
30 d survival, n = 17
P value
Age in yr, mean ± SD48.09 ± 15.447.29 ± 12.20.88
Female sex2 (18.2)6 (35.3)0.419
Etiology of liver transplant
Hepatocellular carcinoma13 (31.0)7 (25.0)0.419
Hepatitis B virus20 (47.6)13 (46.4)0.934
BSI source, episodes
Primary02 (11.8)0.505
Respiratory tract3 (27.3)2 (11.8)0.353
Intra-abdominal4 (36.4)5 (29.4)0.7
Biliary tract5 (45.5)2 (11.8)0.076
Urinary tract1 (9.1)5 (29.4)0.355
Management of infection
Empiric therapy3 (27.3)11 (64.7)0.053
Target therapy7 (63.6)5 (29.4)0.074
Source control1 (9.1)1 (5.9)0.747
Patient outcome
Suspected rejection16 (54.5)1 (5.9)0.007
Pathogen
Acinetobacter baumannii5 (45.5)2 (11.1)0.044
Klebsiella pneumoniae6 (54.5)5 (29.4)0.184
Management of immunosuppressive therapy
IS reduction1 (9.1)7 (41.2)0.099
Complete IS withdrawal 10 (90.9)5 (29.4)0.002

Univariate analysis showed that rejection within 90 d after BSI, K. pneumoniae infection, and complete IS withdrawal were significantly associated with 30 d mortality of GNB infections after LT. Multivariate analysis indicated that rejection within 90 d after BSI (P = 0.01) and complete IS withdrawal (P = 0.019) were independent predictors of 30 d mortality in patients with GNB infections (Table 4).

Table 4 Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis of risk factors for 30 d mortality after Gram-negative bacterial infections in liver transplant recipients.
VariableUnivariate analysis
Multivariate analysis

HR (95%CI)
P value
aHR (95%CI)
P value
Age1.025 (0.969-1.085)0.392
Sex0.778 (0.157-3.857)0.759
Etiology of liver transplant
Hepatocellular carcinoma0.839 (0.169-4.157)0.829
Hepatitis B virus0.666 (0.159-2.79)0.578
Rejection113.89 (2.741-70.376)0.0017.021 (1.581-31.188)0.01
BSI source
Primary0.044 (0.00-3.849)0.581
Respiratory tract1.987 (0.448-8.81)0.366
Intra-abdominal1.343 (0.391-4.611)0.639
Biliary tract2.376 (0.72-7.843)0.156
Urinary tract0.51 (0.063-4.146)0.529
Pathogen
Klebsiella pneumoniae5.165 (1.22-21.87)0.0260.47
Acinetobacter baumannii0.038 (0.00-125.635)0.428
Management of infection
Empiric therapy0.545 (0.13-2.282)0.406
Target therapy1.539 (0.384-6.163)0.543
Source control1.6 (0.197-13.018)0.661
Management of immunosuppressive therapy
IS reduction0.026 (0.0-12.782)0.249
Complete IS withdrawal14.362 (1.818-113.46)0.01212.65 (1.51-105.965)0.019
DISCUSSION

Our data indicate that BSI is a common complication in LT recipients. At least one BSI episode was identified in 14.5% (74/511) of LT recipients in the first year after transplantation. This is consistent with the previous reported incidence of 28%-46%[5,12]. Previous studies demonstrated that one important high risk factor for bacterial infection in patients after solid organ transplantation was post-transplant IS therapy[13,14], which was supported by a hypothesis that post-transplant IS can reduce inflammatory cascades. This is considered one of the main pathophysiological factors of sepsis. Therefore, it is a common option for clinicians to reduce or discontinue immunosuppressive therapy when transplant recipients experience severe infection.

Nearly half of the LT recipients with BSI in our study were managed with either dosage reduction or discontinuation of IS treatment. Of the 28 patients managed with IS reduction, only 5 were managed with either dosage reduction or discontinuation of immunosuppressive therapy in GPB group. Twenty-three patients were managed with either dosage reduction or discontinuation of immunosuppressive therapy in GNB group. In addition, we found that IS withdrawal was common in the patients with MDR GNB infections and associated with increased risk of mortality. However, discontinuation of immunosuppressive regimens did not increase the risk of death in patients with GPB infection.

Few studies are available to evaluate the effect of IS reduction on the outcome of patients with bacterial infection. Mañez et al[8] showed that 31 LT recipients discontinued immunosuppressive drugs temporarily because of severe opportunistic infection, and 41% of these patients died while in the hospital. However, none of them had BSI or sepsis. A recent study[15] described the management of immunosuppressive therapy at the time of diagnosis of BSI in LT recipients. Ninety cases (43%) were managed with “IS reduction”, which was associated with worse outcome in LT recipients with BSI. We also found the same negative correlation between IS reduction and 30 d mortality in patients with drug-resistant bacterial infection in GNB group. The patients with severe infections or septic shock in our center were more likely to be managed by lowering the dose of or withdrawing immunosuppressive agents, but such a practice may have led to the worse outcome.

In patients with GPB BSI, the incidence of graft rejection was 7.1%, and mortality was 4.8% (n = 2). Both patients died from GVHD. In the patients with GNB BSI, the risk of graft rejection was earlier and higher (25.0%) and the mortality was 39.3%. All the deaths except one (GVHD) were due to worsening infection secondary to IS withdrawal. These findings suggest that IS less intense in those cases. The deaths were more likely associated with epidemiologic and technical-surgical factors. Another possible explanation is that IS reduction may put the patients at risk of graft rejection, which in turn leads to graft dysfunction, graft loss, or death[16].

We found that all the BSI episodes occurred in the first 180 d after LT. This was consistent with the previous reports, which confirmed early-onset BSI and other complications[3,10,17-19]. Sganga et al[20] reported that 28% of transplant recipients developed BSI in the first 60 d after LT. In a Japanese study, 34.3% of LT recipients developed BSI in the first 90 d after LT and had a higher mortality rate than the recipients without BSI[3]. Kim et al[2] also reported that recipients with early-onset BSI were at a significantly higher risk of mortality compared to those without infection or infection without bacteremia. Several factors have contributed to the increased risk of early bacterial infection, including complexity of surgical procedures, high level of IS due to rejection, multiple entries for microorganisms (e.g., incisions, catheters, and probes), and poor performance status[21-23].

GPBs were previously considered to be the key BSI pathogens after tran-splantation[5,24,25]. However, current research identified GNBs as the predominant pathogens[26-28]. We found in this study that GPBs were more frequently isolated than GNBs (60.8% vs 39.2%). Meanwhile, we found a high prevalence of infections caused by MDR GNB, including Acinetobacter (24.14%), and Enterobacteriaceae (37.93%), mainly carbapenem-resistant strains. MDR GNB pathogens in LT recipients have increased worldwide, with a prevalence of over 50%. MDR GNB infections are associated with higher mortality rate than GPB infections[29,30]. Previous studies reported that MDR GNB infections were common in LT recipients[26,31,32]. A cohort study of 475 LT recipients demonstrated that MDR GNB infections were associated with higher mortality (50%)[13].

The common pathogens of infection after LT include E. coli, Klebsiella, Enterobacter, and S. marcescens[27,33]. P. aeruginosa and A. baumannii are also common causes of GNB infection. The prevalence of ESBL-producing GNB, carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae(CRKP), MDR Acinetobacter, and MDR Pseudomonas are on the rise and are associated with higher rate of treatment failure[13]. Importantly, we found that infection due to MDR GNB was one of the strongest predictors of post-LT mortality. The 90 d mortality was as high as 50% for the patients with MDR GNB infections. These findings are consistent with two recent studies showing that when LT patients were infected with CRKP, the 1-year survival dropped dramatically from 86 % to 29 % and from 93% to 55%, respectively[34,35].

As prior studies reported[2,26,27], the most frequent sources of BSIs in our study were intra-abdominal and biliary tract in GNB group. Intra-abdominal infection largely occurred in the first 3 mo, while cholangitis was the major source of BSI at later time. Reduction of biliary complications was thought to be an important factor for lower incidence of bacteremia, especially in living-donor liver transplantation because biliary tract is one of the most common port of bacterial entry due to the complexity of liver transplantation procedures[2]. Similar to previous reports[36-38], the primary site of infection was not identified in 17.6% of the cases in this study, probably due to early proactive antibiotic therapy and the difficulty of identifying intra-abdominal and biliary sources. George et al[38] reported that many episodes of primary bacteremia were associated with biliary leakage, hepatic infarction, or abdominal fluid. Bile leakage or biliary stenosis is a major postoperative complication, with an incidence of 10%-15% in deceased donor LT and 15%-30% in living transplantation recipients[39,40].

There are some limitations in this study. Firstly, this is a retrospective single center and small size study. Secondly, the number of BSI episodes may have been underreported. Finally, variability in immunosuppressive management may exit when comparing our findings with the practice in other medical centers.

CONCLUSION

In conclusion, IS reduction is surprisingly more common in cases of GNB than GPB BSIs in the LT recipients. MDR GNB infection may put LT recipients at higher risk of graft rejection and death than GPB infection. Rejection and complete IS withdrawal are the independent predictors for the 30 d mortality in patients with GNB infection. Complete IS withdrawal should be done cautiously due to increased risk of mortality in the LT recipients complicated with GNB infection. A multidisciplinary approach, timely and appropriate successful antimicrobial therapy, and source control, when necessary, may be safer and more effective than IS reduction therapy in recipients with BSI after LT.

ARTICLE HIGHLIGHTS
Research background

Bacterial infections continue to be the most common infectious complication after liver transplantation (LT), usually within 2 mo after LT. Immunosuppression (IS) is the single most important factor contributing to the incidence of infections in transplant recipients.

Research motivation

The management of IS therapy during infection after LT is highly controversial, although IS reduction (partially discontinue or reduce the dosage of at least one IS agent) or complete withdrawal may be a generally accepted option in life-threatening infections. Few studies are available on the management of IS treatment in the LT recipients complicated with infection.

Research objectives

To describe our experience in the management of IS treatment during bacterial bloodstream infection (BSI) in LT recipients and assess the effect of temporary IS withdrawal on 30 d mortality of recipients presenting with severe infection.

Research methods

A retrospective study was conducted with the patients diagnosed with BSI after LT in the Department of Liver Surgery, Renji Hospital from January 1, 2016 through December 31, 2017. All recipients diagnosed with BSI infections after LT were included in this study. Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis of risk factors for 30 d mortality was conducted in LT patients with Gram-negative bacterial (GNB) infections.

Research results

Seventy-four episodes of BSI were identified in 70 LT recipients, including 45 episodes of Gram-positive bacterial (GPB) infections in 42 patients and 29 episodes of Gram-negative bacterial infections in 28 patients. Overall, IS reduction (at least 50% dose reduction or cessation of one or more immunosuppressive agent) was made in 28 (41.2%) cases, specifically, in 5 (11.9%) cases with GPB infections and 23 (82.1%) cases with GNB infection. The 180 d all-cause mortality rate was 18.5% (13/70). The mortality rate in GNB group (39.3%, 11/28) was significantly higher than that in GPB group (4.8%, 2/42) (P = 0.001). All the deaths in GNB group were attributed to worsening infection secondary to IS withdrawal but the deaths in GPB group were all due to graft-versus-host disease. GNB group was associated with significantly higher incidence of intra-abdominal infection, IS reduction, and complete IS withdrawal than GPB group (P < 0.05). Cox regression showed that rejection (adjusted hazard ratio 7.021, P = 0.001) and complete IS withdrawal (adjusted hazard ratio 12.65, P = 0.019) were independent risk factors for 30 d mortality in patients with GNB infections after LT.

Research conclusions

IS reduction is more frequently associated with GNB infection than GPB infection in LT recipients. Complete IS withdrawal should be cautious due to increased risk of mortality in the LT recipients complicated with BSI.

Research perspectives

IS reduction may be a generally accepted option in life-threatening infections after LT. However, this practice must be discussed thoroughly, as it seems to be associated with worse outcome in patients with BSI. A multidisciplinary approach, timely and appropriate successful antimicrobial therapy, and source control, when necessary, may be safer and more effective than IS reduction therapy in recipients with BSI after LT.

Footnotes

Manuscript source: Unsolicited manuscript

Specialty type: Transplantation

Country/Territory of origin: China

Peer-review report’s scientific quality classification

Grade A (Excellent): 0

Grade B (Very good): B, B

Grade C (Good): C, C

Grade D (Fair): 0

Grade E (Poor): 0

P-Reviewer: Isaji S, Sales-Campos H S-Editor: Zhang H L-Editor: Filipodia P-Editor: Wang LL

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