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Journal Article
|Research

Community and hospital-acquired invasive bacterial infections in hospitalised patients with advanced HIV disease: a prospective study in Kinshasa, DRC

Langendorf C, Bossard C, Nackers F, Comelli A, Berghmans M, Molay G, Gomez FG, Dicko A, Bangwen E, Kalwangila T, Mangana F, Kilundu A, Beni RN, Mboyo A, Burton R, Lumowo GM, Isaakidis P
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Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Advanced HIV patients face high mortality, often from invasive bacterial infections (IBI), while rising antimicrobial resistance (AMR) threatens treatment. This study reports IBIs and AMR in hospitalised advanced HIV patients in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).


METHODS

In this prospective study, all patients with blood (BC) or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) culture on admission or during hospitalisation were eligible to participate. An IBI was defined as a positive blood or CSF culture and categorised as community-acquired IBI if occurring <48 h since admission, or hospital-acquired IBI if occurring ≥48 h after admission.


RESULTS

We included 724 patients over 1 year. Community-acquired IBI was suspected in 648 hospitalisations and confirmed in 108 (16.7%). The incidence of hospital-acquired IBI was 2.4 per 1000 patient-days. Non-typhoidal Salmonella and K. pneumoniae were the leading cause of community- (46%, 53/116) and hospital-acquired IBI (42%, 10/24), respectively. Ceftriaxone resistance was observed in 80% of Enterobacterales from community-acquired IBI. In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in hospital-acquired IBI (55%) compared to community-acquired IBI (35%, P < 0.001) and BC-negative patients (21%, P < 0.001).


CONCUSION

IBI are frequent in hospitalised advanced HIV patients in DRC, with high mortality and alarming resistance patterns, highlighting the need for carbapenem-sparing strategies.

Countries

Democratic Republic of Congo

Subject Area

infections, otherantimicrobial resistanceHIV/AIDS

Languages

English
DOI
10.1016/j.ijid.2026.108383
Published Date
10 Jan 2026
PubMed ID
41525925
Journal
International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume | Issue | Pages
Online ahead of print, Pages 108383
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