Ten years of the Uruguayan Registry of Peritonitis in Peritoneal Dialysis

Authors

  • Liliana Gadola Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Nefrología. Profesora Agregada
  • Teresa Gómez Sociedad Uruguaya de Nefrología, Grupo de Diálisis Peritoneal. Nefróloga
  • Lucía Saez Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Nefrología. Ex Asistente
  • Daniel Pérez Sociedad Uruguaya de Nefrología, Grupo de Diálisis Peritoneal. Nefrólogo
  • Lucía Orihuela Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Nefrología. Ex Asistente
  • Virginia Ramella Sociedad Uruguaya de Nefrología, Grupo de Diálisis Peritoneal. Nefróloga y Pediatra
  • Emma Bugstaller Sociedad Uruguaya de Nefrología, Grupo de Diálisis Peritoneal. Nefróloga
  • Alejandra Canon Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Centro de Nefrología. Ex Asistente
  • Carlota González-Bedat Sociedad Uruguaya de Nefrología, Registro Uruguayo de Diálisis, Grupo de Diálisis Peritoneal. Nefróloga
  • Patricia Larre-Borges Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Nefrología. Profesora Adjunta
  • Mariela Mautone Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Nefrología. Profesora Adjunta
  • Anabella Rébori ASSE, Centro Hospitalario Pereira Rossell, Servicio de Nefrología Pediátrica. Jefa
  • Alicia Sans Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Nefrología. Ex Asistente
  • Natalia Orihuela Sociedad Uruguaya de Nefrología, Grupo de Diálisis Peritoneal. Nefróloga
  • Mario Forselledo Sociedad Uruguaya de Nefrología, Grupo de Diálisis Peritoneal. Nefrólogo
  • María Eugenia Torres Debat Laboratorio de Bacteriología CASMU-IAMPP. Microbióloga. Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Bacteriología y Virología, Laboratorio Clínico. Ex Profesora Adjunta
  • Verónica Seija Universidad de la República, Facultad de Medicina, Laboratorio de Patología Clínica, orientación Bacteriología. Profesora Agregada. Microbióloga

Keywords:

PERITONITIS, PERITONEAL DYALISIS

Abstract

Peritonitis is a severe complication of peritoneal dialysis (PD), so it is important to learn about the incidence and antibiotic sensitivity of the germs that cause it. In Uruguay, since January 1, 2004, a national record is kept for peritonitis in PD, germs, sensitivity and evolution.
Method: the records from January 1, 2004 through December 31, 2013 were analyzed. The registry was approved by institutional ethical committes.
Results: during the above mentioned period, 850 cases of peritonitis were recorded, and incidence dropped from 0.49/patient-year (2004-2005) to 0.37/patient-year (2013). Incidence of Staphylococcus aureus and coagulase-negative staphylococci (SCoN) was lower in 2009-2013 vs 2004-2005 (0.2 vs 0.12 peritonitis/patient-year, test Poisson p<0.05). In 2009-2013: 14/54 S. aureus and 26/71 SCoN were methicillin-resistant, similar to the previous period. 98% of Gram-negative were sensitive to amikacin. No germ was identified in 145/467 (31%) of episodes. Primary cure was achieved in 71% of peritonitis for Gram-positive and 45% for Gram-negative bacteria (chi2 p<0.05). In 2013 a greater incidence of peritonitis was observed in those centers where the nasal carriage was not controlled.
Comments and conclusions: controlling Staphylococcus aureus nasal carriages is worth doing. The incidence of peritonitis by methicillin-resistant S. aureus y SCoN, the sustained incidence of Gram-negative germs (with a worse evolution), and the high percentage of cultures with no development justify keeping the initial empirical antibiotic protocol with vancomycin and amikacin. Reduction in the incidence of S. aureus + SCoN could be explained by a greater education in PD patients.

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Published

2016-09-30

How to Cite

1.
Gadola L, Gómez T, Saez L, Pérez D, Orihuela L, Ramella V, et al. Ten years of the Uruguayan Registry of Peritonitis in Peritoneal Dialysis. Rev. Méd. Urug. [Internet]. 2016 Sep. 30 [cited 2024 Nov. 24];32(3):166-77. Available from: https://revista.rmu.org.uy/index.php/rmu/article/view/165

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