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Grand RoundsWeekly Evidence Brief

Infectious Diseases

Edition

30-Second Takeaway

  • Hospital-treated infections associate with higher incident dementia risk (robust cohort evidence).
  • CDSS prompts reduced extended-spectrum antibiotic days without safety signal in hospitalized cancer patients.

Week ending June 13, 2026

Infections, stewardship tools, and survival signals: five actionable study summaries

Hospital-treated infections strongly linked to subsequent dementia, amplified by biological aging

BRAIN, BEHAVIOR, AND IMMUNITYJun 10, 2026

In a UK Biobank cohort of 339,463 adults followed a median ~13.5 years, hospital-treated infections were associated with incident dementia (HR 2.39, 95% CI 2.25–2.53). The association held across pathogen types, severities, anatomical sites, and dementia subtypes, including young-onset dementia. Phenotypic age acceleration significantly intensified the infection–dementia association (interaction HR 1.20), and APOE ε4 status modified risk patterns. Clinical implication: prior hospital-treated infection is an independent risk marker for dementia, especially in biologically older or APOE ε4 carriers.

AI integration may optimize gastro-renal antimicrobial selection but lacks clinical validation

FRONTIERS IN CELLULAR AND INFECTION MICROBIOLOGYJun 10, 2026

This review synthesizes AI/ML approaches that integrate clinical, microbiologic, and multi-omics data to predict resistance and tailor antibiotic choice and dosing in gastro-renal infections. Authors propose AI could reduce inappropriate selection and preserve microbiome integrity by accounting for PK variability and renal function. Limitations include data heterogeneity, scarce prospective validation, regulatory barriers, and requirement for ongoing human oversight.

High pediatric antibiotic prescribing in Africa with substantial parenteral and Watch use

SYSTEMATIC REVIEWSJun 11, 2026

Systematic review and meta-analysis across African pediatric studies found pooled antibiotic prescribing prevalence 76.0% (95% CI 68.0–82.0; I2=99.8%). About 78.0% received at least one parenteral antibiotic, with mean 1.55 antibiotics per patient; Access antibiotics comprised 65%, Watch 27%, Reserve 3%. Regional variation was large (Central 85%, Western 83%, Eastern/Southern 64%), highlighting stewardship targets under AWaRe to reduce parenteral and Watch-group use.

References

Numbered in order of appearance. Click any reference to view details.

Additional Reads

Optional additional studies from this edition.

Edition context

Clinical signal

  • For older or APOE ε4 patients, prioritize infection prevention and consider infection history when counseling about dementia risk.
  • Interpret AI-for-antimicrobials as promising but **not practice-changing yet** without prospective clinical validation.
  • In African pediatric care, target stewardship to reduce parenteral and Watch-group use under AWaRe.