Invasive Pneumococcal Bacteremia in a 9-Year-Old Boy Caused by Serotype 1: Course, Treatment and Costs

Autor: Dominik Dziurda, Joanna Załęska-Ponganis, Teresa Jackowska
Rok vydání: 2012
Předmět:
Zdroj: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology ISBN: 9789400745452
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-4546-9_33
Popis: Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading cause of bacteremia, sepsis, meningitis, pneumonia, sinusitis, and acute otitis media in young children. Some serotypes are associated with particular disease syndromes, such as complicated pneumonias in children, or with higher rates of hospitalization in children and are consistently responsible for outbreaks in certain populations. In this report we describe a case of a nine-year-old boy who developed an abscess of pleura and invasive pneumococcal bacteremia. The boy was admitted to the hospital with abdominal pain and vomiting, accompanied by mild cough and fever. Chest X-ray revealed lower left lobe consolidation with pleural inflammation and chest CT showed extensive interstitial-alveolar changes in the left lung with atelectasis and pleural effusion causing a reduction in lung volume up to the fourth rib. From the 6th day of hospitalization on, suction drainage and intrapleural administration of alteplase were continued for 5 days. Intravenous antibiotics were administered for subsequent 32 days. The course of disease was complicated with labial herpes and acute adenoviral gastroenteritis. The costs of diagnosis (11.7%), pharmacotherapy (55.2%), hospitalization (30.7%) and additional procedures (2.4%) were about €4,444, while the cost of treatment from the perspective of the National Health Fund was only €1,508. The costs of treating the boy with sepsis caused by S. pneumoniae serotype 1 were thus about three times higher than those from the perspective of providers of the National Health Fund. Administration of a new pneumococcal conjugated vaccine containing serotype 1 (PHiD-CV10 or PCV13) could have prevented invasive pneumococcal disease in the described patient.
Databáze: OpenAIRE