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Febrile #95 – Viva Pediatric ID! Live from Memphis

95 Cover Art OPT

Summary

Drs. Sumanth Cherukumilli, Emma Mohr, and Paul Spearman join for a live Febrile recording at the St. Jude / PIDS Pediatric Infectious Diseases Research Conference in Memphis, TN. They cover some learning points about early onset neonatal sepsis and chat about career development.

Table of Contents

Credits

Host: Sara Dong

Guests: Sumanth Cherukumilli, Emma Mohr, Paul Spearman

Content Editing, Cover Art: Sara Dong

Audio Editing: Bentley Brown

Produced by Sara Dong with support from the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)

Our Guests

Sumanth Cherukumilli, MD

Dr. Sumanth Cherukumilli is a second-year pediatric infectious diseases fellow at the University of Maryland. He completed his medical schooling at the American University of Antigua and completed his pediatrics residency at the Marshfield Clinic in Marshfield, Wisconsin. His main research interest is AMR in low- and middle-income countries. Sumanth was selected as the Top Abstract for this meeting, and his project was entitled: High mortality rates and antimicrobial resistance in children with invasive bacterial infections in a tertiary care facility in West Africa

Emma Mohr, MD, PhD

Dr. Emma Mohr is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, the Director of Physician Scientist Development Pathway, and Pediatric ID fellowship program associate director at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.  Dr. Mohr completed her undergraduate degree (B.A. in Biology and Biochemistry) at Gustavus Adolphus College in Minnesota. She earned her medical degree (M.D.) and graduate degree (Ph.D. in cellular and molecular biology) at the University of Iowa, as part of the Medical Scientist Training Program. She completed her pediatrics residency at Emory University and her pediatric infectious diseases fellowship at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  In addition to caring for pediatric patients with complex infections, she leads a research laboratory defining immune correlates of protection, neuropathogenesis and early predictors of developmental outcomes in congenital Zika virus infection.  Lab is linked in the Bacteria icon below!

Paul Spearman, MD

Dr. Paul Spearman is the Vice Chair for Clinical and Translational Research and Education for the Department of Pediatrics and the Albert B. Sabin Professor and Director of Infectious Diseases at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Cincinnati, OH.  He earned his medical degree from the University of Texas Southwestern.  He completed his Med-Peds training at Ohio State University followed by infectious diseases fellowship at Washington University, St. Louis.  His laboratory studies fundamental aspects of HIV biology and develops new vaccines for human pathogens.

Culture

Sumanth enjoys watching Love is Blind

Emma loves running

Paul shared that he has been into sculpture

Consult Notes

This episode was recorded live at the St. Jude / PIDS Pediatric Infectious Diseases Research Conference held March 6-8, 2024 in Memphis, TN

  • This annual conference features leaders in the field of ID and features pediatric ID research, transplant/immunocompromised host ID, career development, and global health.
  • You can find the full agenda on the website
  • Thank you to the meeting organizers for the invitation and support! 

Emma and Paul provided an overview of initial evaluation and management of early onset sepsis

  • Early-onset neonatal sepsis is generally defined as within 72 hrs vs 7 days of birth (there isn’t a clear consensus definition of neonatal sepsis, so you may hear both time frames)
  • Typically due to vertical transmission by ascending contaminated amniotic fluid or during vaginal delivery due to bacteria in from maternal GU or GI tract
  • Risk factors
      • Well recognized: maternal chorioamnionitis or intra-amniotic infection
      • Maternal Group B Streptococcus (GBS) colonization
      • Use of forceps during delivery and electrodes have been implicated
  • Pathogen ddx for early onset neonatal infection (in North America) typically includes:
      • GBS
      • E.coli
      • Other less common bacterial: Other GNs, Enterococcus, Listeria, Nontypeable H.flu, S.aureus, etc
      • Nonbacterial considerations: HSV, Enterovirus, Parechovirus, Candida
  • The incidence of EOS in the US has decreased, primarily from the reduction in GBS infections with use of intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis.  Neonatal sepsis rates vary widely with associated mortality rates reported in some pooled studies as high as 11-19%
  • We discussed the typical US empiric therapy of ampicillin + aminoglycoside vs ampicillin + 3rd or 4th gen cephalosporin, but ultimately the best empiric regimen will be based on your local epidemiology
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CHAMPS: Sumanth provided some additional perspective on empiric therapy and management related to his research

Goal

Listeners will be able to understand the variable epidemiology of early onset neonatal sepsis

Learning Objectives

After listening to this episode, listeners will be able to:

  • List the top pathogens that cause early onset neonatal sepsis in the US
  • Describe the CHAMPS network/study
  • Discuss some of the challenges in management of infection in young children in resource limited settings

Disclosures

Drs. Dong, Mohr, and Spearman received a speaker honorarium for other presentations at this conference (St. Jude/PIDS Pediatric ID Research Conference).  Our guests as well as Febrile podcast and hosts report no other relevant financial disclosures

Citation

Cherukumilli, S., Mohr, E., Spearman, P., Dong, S. “#95: Viva Pediatric ID! Live from Memphis”.   Febrile: A Cultured Podcast. https://player.captivate.fm/episode/fa44c812-8061-48af-97fb-b417382225e0

Transcript

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