Skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI) (IDSA 2014)
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Skin and soft tissue infections (IDSA 2014)
Introduction
- Exposure history is important
- Physical examination for diagnosis
- History must include
- Immune status
- Geographic locales
- Travel history
- Recent trauma and surgeries
- Recent antibiotics exposure
- Lifestyle
- Hobbies
- Animal exposures
[Management pathway for cellulitis](SSTIs 2014-1.pdf)
Impetigo and Ecthyma
Background
- Impetigo is a superficial infection of the epidermis (?)
- Bullous impetigo is caused by Staph. aureus strains that produce a toxin that cleaves the dermal-epidermal junction
- Non-bullous impetigo can be caused by Staph. aureus and Group A Strep
- Ecthyma is a deeper infection, and heals with scarring
Organisms
- Staph aureus
- Group A Strep
Management
- Gram stain and culture of any pus, if possible
- Superficial and localized infections can be treated with topical mupirocin BID x5d
- Otherwise, treat with dicloxacillin or cephalexin x7d
- Can narrow if cultures grow Group A Strep alone
- If MRSA, treat with doxycycline, clindamycin, or Septra
Purulent SSTIs
- Includes abscesses, furuncles, carbuncles, and inflamed epidermoid cysts
Abscesses and inflamed epidermoid cysts
- Epidermoid cysts contain skin flora in keratinous material and are not necessarily infected, but can become inflamed if the capsule ruptures
- Organisms: Staph. aureus and skin flora
- Management
- Incision and drainage; no packing (increases pain without changing outcomes)
- Add antibiotics if impaired immunity or systemic symptoms
Furuncles and carbuncles
- Furuncles are small abscesses of hair follicles
- Carbuncles involve many adjacent follicles
- Organisms: almost exclusively Staph. aureus
- Management
- Often drain spontaneously with warm wet compresses
- If large enough, can incise and drain
- No need for antibiotics unless systemic symptoms
Recurrent abscesses (at the same site)
- Differential diagnosis includes foreign body, hidradenitis suppuritiva, and pilonidal cysts
- Organisms: excluding above causes, often Staph. aureus
- Management
- Treat underlying cause, if possible
- Can try MRSA decolonization with
- Intranasal mupirocin BID for 5 days each month, with daily chlorhexadine washes
- Clindamycin 150mg for 3 months
- If present since childhood, rule out a neutrophil disorder
Erysipelas and Cellulitis
Background
- Infections of the dermis and subcutaneous fat, characterized by diffuse areas of erythema, edema, and tenderness
- Specifically *not *purulent; if there's an abscess, then it's an abscess with surrounding erythema (not with surrounding cellulitis)
- Erysipelas refers to either (1) a superficial infection of the upper dermis, or (2) a cellulitis of the face, or (3) a synonym of cellulitis
- On examination, there can also be lymphangitis, peau d'orange, vesicles, bullae, or hemorrhagic lesions
- Occasionally, the fever can precede the skin findings
- Risk factors include: obesity, trauma, surgery, prior cellulitis, venous insufficiency, lymphedema
Organisms
- Group A Strep
- Other streptococci
- Staph. aureus
Management
- Blood cultures are unnecessary unless there is something unusual, immunosuppression, or sepsis
- Treat with an antistreptococcal antibiotic, such as penicillin, amoxicillin, dicloxacillin, cephalexin, or clindamycin for 5 days
- No need to empirically cover MRSA
- Treat any underlying skin breach, including macerated skin between the toes
- Can use prednisone (if no diabetes) or NSAIDs to help symptoms resolve faster
Recurrent infections
- Identify and treat predisponsing conditions: edema, obesity, eczema, venous insufficiency, and toe web abnormalities
- Prophylactic antibiotics can be considered in patients who have 3-4 episodes per year despite treating their predisposing factors
- Oral penicillin or sythromycin bid for 4 to 52 weeks
- IM benzathine penicillin every 2-4 weeks
- Continue prophylaxis until the predisposing factors resolve
Surgical site infections
Background
- Three classes
- Superficial incisional SSI: involve only the subcutaneous space, occurs within 30 days, and has one of:
- Purulent drainage
- Positive culture of aseptically-obtained fluid or tissue
- Local cellulitis after the wound has been opened
- Expert opinion suggests SSI
- Deep incisional SSI: involves fascia and mucle, within 30 days (or 1 year if prosthesis inserted), and same as above
- Organ/space SSI: same as deep SSI but may involve organs and deep space, e.g. peritonitis, empyema, and joint infections
- Superficial incisional SSI: involve only the subcutaneous space, occurs within 30 days, and has one of:
Organisms
- Depends in part on site of incision, but generally S. aureus and streptococcal species
- Axillary incisions may have more gram-negative organisms, and paerineal incisions have more gram-negatives and anaerobes
Management
- Open the incision and evacuate the cavity
- Drainage alone if <5cm erythema and minimal systemic symptoms
- For some reason, IDSA seems to suggests tazo or mero as first-line; possibly just for gastrointestinal and genitourinary incisions
Necrotizing Fasciitis
Background
- Involve the fascial or muscle compartments and are life-threatening
- Usually develop from initial skin trauma, which can be trivial including insect bites
- Presents as a rapidly-progressing cellulitis, with systemic symptoms and pain out of proportion to findings
- May have wooden-hard induration, and if there is an open wound, you can easily dissect the fascial planes
- Risk factors include diabetes
Organisms
- Monomicrobial: S. pyogenes, S. aureus, V. vulnificans, A. hydrophila, and anaerobic streptococci (Cutibacterium)
- Polymicrobial: numerous aerobes and anaerobes, mostly arising from the bowel or genitourinary tract
Management
- CT or MRI is not diagnostic
- Surgical exploration for diagnosis and deep tissue cultures
- Surgical intervention urgently, and daily until source control is achieved
- Treat with antibiotics until source control achieved and afebrile for 48-72 hours
- Empiric antibiotics should cover gram-positives, gram-negatives, and anaerobes
- Group A streptococcal toxic shock syndrome should be treated with clindamycin and penicillin
- The utility of IVIg is unclear; small RCT suggests not
Fournier gangrene
- Variant involving the scrotum and penis or vulva, where a perianal or retroperitoneal infection has spread to the genitalia
- Testes, glans, and spermatic cord are typically spared
- Mostly mixed aerobes and anaerobes
Pyomyositis
Background
- Pus within an individual muscle group, often associated with tropical climates
- Risk factors include tropical climates, HIV, diabetes
- May have a firm woody feel
- CK often normal
Organisms
- Staph. aureus in 90%
- Group A Strep and gram-negative enterics also possible
Investigations
- MRI establishes the diagnosis, though CT and US are useful
- Get blood cultures (positive in 5-30%)
- Repeat imaging if persistently bacteremic in order to find other infections
Management
- Needs incision and drainage
- Vancomycin is appropriate empiric therapy
- Add Gram-negative coverage if immunocompromised or open trauma
- Cefazolin for oxacillin for MSSA
- Duration is with IV until better and not bacteremic, then oral to complete 2-3 weeks
Gas Gangrene and Myonecrosis
Background
- Increasing pain at the injury site within 24 hours
- Skin starts pale, then bronze, then purplish-red, tenderness at the site, followed by reddish-blue bullae
- Septic
Organisms
- Clostridium perfringens, C. novyi, C. histolyticum, and C. septicum
- C. perfringens most commonly associated with trauma-associated gangrene, and C. septicum with spontaneous gangrene in neutropenic patients or those with GI malignancy
Management
- Many organisms produce gas, so needs broad empiric coverage with pip/tazo, amp/sulb, or carbapenem
- Penicillin + clindamycin is the recommended treatment
- Unclear role for hyperbaric oxygen
Animal Bites
Prophylaxis
- Unclear benefit of prophylaxis, but suggest 3-5 days of amox/clav to cover aerobes and anaerobes in high-risk patients
- Immunocompromised
- Asplenic
- Advanced liver disease
- Preexisting edema in the affected area
- Moderate to severe injuries, especially hand or face
- Injuries that penetrate the periosteum or joint capsule
- Should be assessed for rabies prophylaxis
- Avoid primary wound closure except on the face, in which case it should be done with copious irrigation
Wound infections
- Purulent wounds are often polymicrobial, and need to cover aerobes and anaerobes
- Nonpurulent wounds are often monomicrobial with staphylococci and streptococci, but are also sometimes polymicrobial
- Pasteurella is common in both
- Antibiotic options
- Amox/clav is good empiric coverage
- 2nd and 3rd gen cephalosporins +/- clinda/metronidazole
- Carbapenems
- Moxifloxacin
- Doxycycline
- Septra + clinda/metronidazole
- Levfloxacin + clinda/metronidazole
- Human bites also include streptococci, S. aureus, Eikonella corrodens, Fusobacterium, Peptostreptococcus, Prevotella, and Porphyromonas
- Eikonella is resistant to 1st-gen cephalosporins but amox/clav is good as is moxifloxacin
Tetanus toxoid
- Give tetanus toxoid vaccine if not vaccinated within 10 years
- Tdap preferred to Td, if they haven't previously received it
Cutaneous Anthrax
Background
- Incubation period 1-12 days followed by pruritis, then papule, then vesicles, the finally painless ulcer with black eschar without pus
- Eschar sloughs after 12-14 days
- Surrounding edema can be minimal or severe and lymphadenopathy is common
- Often mild systemic symptoms
- Diagnosis
- Vesicles: unroof and soak 2 dry swabs in the vesicular fluid
- Ulcer: 2 moist swabs in the ulcer base or along the eschar edge
- Punch biopsy for immunohistochemistry or PCR
Management
- Oral penicillin V 500 mg qid x7-10 days
- If bioterrorism/aerosol exposure, ciprofloxacin 500 mg po bid or levofloxacin 500 mg poVI daily for 60 days
Bacillary Angiomatosis and Cat Scratch Disease
Background
Cat scratch disease
- Caused by Bartonella henselae
- After an incubation period of 3-30 days following a scratch or bite, a papule or pustule forms
- Lymphadenopathy develops at about 3 weeks, and resolveds within 1-6 months
- Occasionally, nodes can drain; rarely, extranodal visceral disease can occur
Bacillary angiomatosis
- Caused by Bartonella henselae or B. quintana in immunocompromised patients, especially those with AIDS
- Can appear either as red papular that vary in size (millimeter to centimeters) and number (1 to 1000), or as subcutaneous, painful nodules with overlying normal or dusky skin
Diagnosis
- Fastidious, difficult-to-grow
- Serology cross-reacts between B. henselae and B. quintana
- PCR is one option
Management
Cat scratch disease
- If >45 kg: azithromycin 500 mg on day 1 then 250 mg daily for 4 more days
- If <45 kg: azithromycin 10 mg/kg on day 1 then 5 mg/kg daily for 4 more days
Bacillary angiomatosis
- Erythromycin 500 mg qid or doxycycline 100 mg bid for 2 weeks to 2 months
Erysipeloid
Background
- Cutaneous infection caused by Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae, a thin, pleomorphic, non-spore-forming Gram-positive rod
- Acquired by handling fish, marine animals, swine, or poulty
- Incubation period of 1 to 7 days, followed by red maculopapular lesion on fingers or hands, spreading centrifugally with central clearing
- May have a blue ring with peripheral red halo (target appearance)
- Lymphadenopathy is common, though systemic symptoms are not
- Diagnosed by aspirate and culture
Management
- Penicillin 500 mg qid or amoxicillin 500 mg tid for 7 to 10 days
- ALternatives include cephalosporins, clindamycin, and fluoroquinolones
- Resistant to vancomycin, teicoplanin, and daptomycin
Glanders
- Caused by Burkholderia mallei, an aerobic Gram-negative rod
- Acquired from horses and mules through skin contact or inhalation
- Causes ulcerating nodular lesions of the skin and mucosa
- Treated with ceftazidime, gentamicin, imipenem, doxycycline, or ciprofloxacin for a prolonged course (?6 months)
Bubonic Plague
- Caused by Yersinia pestis, a facultative anaerobic Gram-negative coccobacillus
- Acquired from rodents
- Three syndromes:
- Bubonic
- Most common and classic, acquired from infected fleas or through breached skin
- Incubation period of 2 to 6 days followed by fever, headache, chills, and regional lymphadenopathy
- Skin lesion sometimes present at site of entry
- May progress to septicemia and secondary pneumonia
- Septicemic
- Pneumonic
- Transmissible human-to-human
- Bubonic
- Diagnosis made by blood culture, lymph node aspirate, or PCR; serology may be helpful for confirming the diagnosis retrospectively
- Treatment
- Streptomycin 15 mg/kg bid for 10 to 14 days
- Alternatives: genatmicin, tetracycline, chloramphenicol, maybe fluoroquinolones
- If pneumonic form develops, needs to be in droplet isolation until 48 hours of effective therapy
Tularemia
- Gram-negative coccobacillus Francisella tularensis
- Distinct syndromes:
- Ulceroglandular
- Glandular
- Typhoidal
- Pneumonic
- Oculoglandular
- Oropharyngeal
- Acquired by handling infected animals, by tick bites, sometimes by animal bites (especially cats), as well as by biting flies or mosquitoes
- Skin ulcer forms at site of bite after 3-10 days with tender adenopathy, fevers, headache, and malaise (ulceroglandular syndrome)
- If the ulcer heals quickly, with ongoing symptoms, they may present without the ulcer as glandular syndrome
- Diagnosis
- Serology
- Culture with cysteine-supplemented media; notify the lab first
- PCR may be useful
- Treatment
- Streptomycin 15 mg/kg/day q12h (max 2 g per day)
- Gentamicin 1.5 mg/kg q8h (or 2 mg/kg q8h in children)
- Duration 7-10 days, 14 days if severe
- Fluoroquinolones, tetracycline, or doxycycline can be used in mild to moderate cases, for a total of 14 days for oral therapy
- Inherent resistance to beta-lactams
- High rate of relapse
Immunocompromised Patients
- Infections may appear different or less pronounced due to the damped host immune response
- Differential diagnoss should include
- Infectious: bacterial, fungal, viral, and parasitic infections
- Non-infectious: drug eruption, cutaneous infiltration of malignancy, chemotherapy reactions, radiation reactions, Sweet syndrome, erythema multiforme, leukocytoclastic vasculitis, and graft-vs-host disease
- Biopsy or aspiration should be implemented early
Cancer Patients with Febrile Neutropenia
- Early aspiration or biopsy for etiology
- Risk stratify with MASCC score
- Investigate with blood cultures, CXR +/- chest CT
Ecthyma gangrenosum
- A cutaneous vasculitis caused by invasion of the vessel wall media and adventitia by bacteria
- Presents as painless erythematous papules that progress to pain and necrosis within 24 hours
- Usually lower extremity
- Caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, but also other Gram-negatives, some Gram-positives, and fungi, even HSV
Management
- Vancomycin plus antipseudomonal antibiotics
- Duration for most SSTIs is 7 to 14 days
- Surgical intervention for source control, if appropriate
- G-CSF is not routinely recommended
- Acyclovir if disseminated HSV or VZV is suspected
Persistent or recurrent
- Consider yeasts and molds, so need to add empiric antifungals
- Candida spp. should be treated with an echinocandin
- C. parapsilosis should be treated with amphotericin
- Fluconazole is acceptable if sensitive
- Duration is two weeks
- Aspergillus spp. should be treated with voriconazole or amphotericin, posaconazole, or echinocandin
- Duration is 6 to 12 weeks
- Mucor/Rhizopus should be treated with amphotericin or posaconazole +/- an echinocandin
- Fusarium should be treated with high-dose voriconazole or posaconazole
- Candida spp. should be treated with an echinocandin
- Ensure resistant bacteria are covered as well, with MRSA coverage and other broad-spectrum
- Add acyclovir if HSV or VZV is suspected; PCR from blood may be helpful
- Blood cultures and skin biopsy, aspiration, or culture is recommended for diagnosis
- Galactomannan is unhelpful in patients on antifungals
Cellular Immunodeficiency
- Lymphoma, leukemia, HSCT or SOT recipients, steroid use, other immunosuppressive agents
- Consult a dermatologist, consider biopsy
- Empiric antibiotcs, antifungals, and/or antivirals in life-threatening situations
Nontuberculous Mycobacteria
- Mostly occurs at site of innoculation but can have hematogenous dissemination
- Most common in SOT is cutaneous and pleuropulmonary disease
- Most common in HSCT is cather-related infections and bacteremias
- Mycobacterium avium complex occurs in HIV disease
- Non-HIV species include: M. fortuitum, M. chelonae, M. abscessus, M. ulcerans, M. kansasii, M. haemophilum, M. marinum, M. mucogenicum
- Skin infections can include a poorly-resolving cellulitis, painless 1 to 2 cm nodules, necrotic ulcers, and subcutaneous abscesses
- Treatment is with combination antibiotics for 6 to 12 weeks
- Macrolide plus second agent that it is susceptible
- See ATS/IDSA Guidelines 2007
Nocardia
- Cutaneous Nocardia is usually metastatic from a primary pulmonary infection
- Species include N. farcinica, N. brasiliensis, and others
- Skin involvement is usually subcutaneous nodules, abscesses, and panniculitis, often cold and painless
- Septra for 6 to 24 months, though combination therapy should be considered in severe infections
- Debride necrotic nodules and large abscesses
Fungi
- Most common causes of cutaneous infection include Aspergillus, Mucormycosis, Scedosporium, and Fusarium
- Can present as papules, nodules, ulcers, and ecthyma gangrenosum
- Skin biopsy is helpful in diagnosis
- Voriconazole good for Aspergillus, Scedosporium, and Fusarium
- Cryptococcal infections usually involve lungs, with hematogenous spreading
- Papules, nodules, pustules, chronic draining necrotic ulcers, or cellulitis
- Fluconazole for milder infections
- Disseminated histoplasmosis is rare and is treated with amphotericin for 1 to 2 weeks followed by itraconazole for 6 to 12 months
Viruses
- VZV is common, sometimes disseminated
- Dermatomal pain often preceeds the lesions by 24- to 72 hours
- Duration of disease usually 2 weeks, but may progress slower in immunodeficient patients
- Treated with high-dose IV acyclovir
- Suspect resistance if it develops while on prophylaxis
- HSV also common
- Orofacial and genital sites most common, but can autoinnoculate any area
- Often preceded by local pain or tingling
- Disseminated disease is rare and usually associated with HSV-2
- Acyclovir, famciclovir, and valacyclovir are all options
- Foscarnet needed in cases of resistance
Parasites
- Strongyloides stercoralis, amebae (Acanthamoeba and Balamuthia), Trypanosoma cruzi, and Sarcoptes scabiei (Norwegian scabies)