Vol. 37 No. 4 (2020)
Clinical Research

Clinical characteristics and microbiological profile of viridans group streptococci bacteremia in children with cancer and high-risk febrile neutropenia

Daniel Cortés
Universidad de Chile
Bio
María Eliana Maldonado
Universidad de Chile
Bio
María Carolina Rivacoba
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Verónica de la Maza
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Romina Valenzuela
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Ernesto Payá
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Verónica Contardo
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Ana María Álvarez
Hospital San Juan de Dios, Santiago
Bio
Carmen Luz Avilés
Hospital San Borja Arriarán, Santiago
Bio
Ana Becker
Hospital Dr. Sótero del Río, Santiago
Bio
Carmen Salgado
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Juan Tordecilla
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Monica Varas
Hospital San Juan de Dios, Santiago
Bio
Marcela Venegas
Hospital San Borja Arriarán, Santiago
Bio
Milena Villarroel
Universidad de Chile
Bio
Tamara Viviani
Hospital Dr. Sótero del Río, Santiago
Bio
Marcela Zubieta
Universidad de Chile
Bio
María Elena Santolaya
Universidad de Chile
Bio

Published 2020-08-29

How to Cite

1.
Cortés D, Maldonado ME, Rivacoba MC, de la Maza V, Valenzuela R, Payá E, Contardo V, Álvarez AM, Avilés CL, Becker A, Salgado C, Tordecilla J, Varas M, Venegas M, Villarroel M, Viviani T, Zubieta M, Santolaya ME. Clinical characteristics and microbiological profile of viridans group streptococci bacteremia in children with cancer and high-risk febrile neutropenia. Rev. Chilena. Infectol. [Internet]. 2020 Aug. 29 [cited 2025 Nov. 13];37(4). Available from: https://revinf.cl/index.php/revinf/article/view/313

Abstract

Background: Viridans group streptococci (VGS) has acquired relevance as a microorganism causing febrile neutropenia, associated with significant morbidity. Aim: To characterize episodes of bacteremia caused by VGS in children with cancer who developed high-risk febrile neutropenia (HRFN) during the period from April 2004 to June 2018 in six pediatric hospitals of Santiago, Chile. Method: Database analysis of 4 successive, prospective and multicentric studies recording clinical and laboratory characteristics of patients, as well as antimicrobial susceptibility pattern of isolated strains. Results: 95 episodes of VGS bacteremia in 91 children with HRFN were analyzed. It emphasizes acute myeloid leukemia as cancer type, deep neutropenia, prolonged hospitalization (15 days), with extended use of antimicrobials (14 days) and use of cytarabine in chemotherapy schemes (86% episodes). The most frequent clinical manifestations were respiratory and gastrointestinal, associating up to 26% viridans group shock syndrome. There was high resistance to β lactams. As expected, there were not non-susceptible strains to vancomycin. Discussion: VGS is a relevant microorganism in children with cancer, fever and neutropenia, with a high percentage of sepsis. Resistance to β lactams is an issue that requires strict epidemiological surveillance in this population.