Hindustan Times (East UP)

ICMR study found no black fungus cases after 1st wave

- Anonna Dutt letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A study by the Indian Council of Medical Research, released on Monday, said that there were no instances of mucormycos­is (black fungus disease), in 10 hospitals where researcher­s tracked secondary bacterial and fungal infections in Covid-19 patients during the first wave of the pandemic.

The study was conducted between June and August last year, on 17,534 patients in 10 hospitals (Two in Delhi, two in Mumbai, one each in Vellore, Jodhpur, Bhopal, Pondicherr­y, Chennai, and Kolkata) and its findings are interestin­g at a time India is combating an unpreceden­ted spate of black fungus cases. The Union government said last week that there were 5,000 cases of the disease, which has a fatality of at least 50%, around the country.

According to the study, secondary bacterial and fungal infections affected around 3.6% (ranging from 1.7% to 28% between hospitals) of patients hospitalis­ed with Covid-19 . And the mortality in patients with these secondary infections was 56.7% as against 10.6% among other hospitalis­ed patients.

The mortality in those with secondary infections was as high as 78.9% in one of the hospitals, the data showed.

“What we found was that most of these secondary infections, 78% of them, were acquired at the hospital; the indication for infections started two days after hospitalis­ation and most of the samples had gram negative bacteria showing that they were hospital-based infection. This could be because infection control policies at the hospitals went for a toss amid the pandemic...,” said Dr Kamini Walia, correspond­ing author of the paper and a scientist with ICMR’s epidemiolo­gy and communicab­le diseases department.

She added, “The most common pathogens causing the infection were klebsiella pneumoniae and acinetobac­ter baumannii; usually E coli is the most common pathogen found as per previous ICMR reports...”

The study cautions about the increase in antimicrob­ial resistance due to excessive use of stronger medicines. Around 74.4% of the total antimicrob­ials prescribed in the hospitals were from the Watch and Reserve category of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

WHO classifies all antibiotic­s in three categories – Access drugs that can treat commonly encountere­d pathogens and have lower resistance potential, Watch drugs that have higher resistance potential and are critical for treatment, and Reserve drugs that need to be saved as last resort.

“Around 47% of the infections were found to be multi-drug resistant; but more than 74% of the antimicrob­ials prescribed were from the Watch and Reserve category...,” said Dr Walia.

Even in the case of mucormycos­is, the overuse (and misuse) of steroids is blamed by many experts. “[This is] a double whammy; Covid-19, along with the secondary infections, increases mortality significan­tly... Mucormycos­is cases reported after the second wave are largely [related] with the overuse of steroids. At the peak [of the second wave], steroids had vanished from the market. This has never happened before...,” said Dr Chand Wattal, head of the department of microbiolo­gy at Sir Ganga Ram hospital, one of the 10 hospitals that participat­ed in the study.

Sampling was low, though, he added. Only 7,163 samples were sent for microbial culture, with multiple samples belonging to the same patients. The low sampling was because of the practical problems; not many healthcare workers wanted to collect them during the first wave when not much was known about the disease.

“The sample size decreased considerab­ly because people were scared to take the samples... The sampling has increased now that people are aware of how to protect themselves,” said Dr Wattal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India