RESUMEN
This study investigates the incidence and predictors for bacterial bloodstream infection (BSI) in 330 adults undergoing allo-HCT, and explores the effect of post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCY) on the probability of presenting this complication. All patients received levofloxacin during the aplastic phase. Only the first episode of BSI was counted as an event. Patients were classified into 2 groups: PTCY-based (n = 200) versus other prophylaxis (n = 130). One hundred twenty-four patients were diagnosed with a first episode of BSI, most of them during the first 30 days (70.2%). Proportions of BSIs caused by Gram-positive bacteria were comparable to those caused by Gram-negative bacteria (48.3% versus 45.9%). The cumulative incidence of BSI was higher in patients receiving PTCY than in those receiving other prophylaxis (days 30 and 100: 35.0% and 37.0% versus 13.1% and 18.5%, P < .001). At day 30, the likelihood of BSI was 2.41 (P = .012) times higher in the PTCY group than in the non-PTCY group. The 30-day mortality rate in all patients with BSI was 8.0%, lower (P = .002) in the PTCY group (2.3%) than in the non-PTCY group (21.6%). Finally, the overall survival of patients receiving PTCY and diagnosed with BSI was similar to that of patients without presenting this complication. © 2023 American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.