RESUMO
AIM: We examined community and hospital-acquired bacteraemia, namely bloodstream infections or meningitis, and looked at the clinical features and outcomes of cases. METHODS: The study comprised infants under 3 months of age, who were admitted to a tertiary referral centre in northern Israel with bacteraemia from 2010-2019. Causative pathogens, antibiotic susceptibility and mortality were retrospectively recorded. RESULTS: We identified 314 infants, 325 episodes of bacteraemia and 344 pathogens. Meningitis was identified in 22 (7.0%) infants. Hospital-acquired bacteraemia accounted for 84.8% of the 325 episodes. Coagulase-negative staphylococci (33.9%) was the most prevalent pathogen in the hospital-acquired cases, while Escherichia coli (37.2%) dominated the community-acquired cases. The susceptibility of Gram-negative early-onset sepsis cases to ampicillin-gentamicin or ampicillin-cefotaxime was 96% and 94.7% for hospital-acquired cases and 91.7% and 88% for community-acquired cases, respectively. Susceptibility to piperacillin-tazobactam or amikacin in late-onset sepsis were 92.8% and 98%, respectively, in hospital-acquired cases. The 30-day mortality was 5.7% in infants with hospital-acquired cases. Risk factors were Arab ethnicity (p < 0.028), haemodynamic instability (<0.001) and Gram-negative sepsis (0.043). CONCLUSION: Most cases of bacteraemia were acquired during hospitalisation and these accounted for the majority of the deaths. Resistance to standard antibiotic regimens was rare.