| Literature DB >> 11136167 |
L Goldberg1, M Clemenger, B Azadian, E A Brown.
Abstract
To reduce the use of vancomycin, the current recommendations of the International Society of Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) for the initial treatment of peritonitis complicating PD are to administer intraperitoneal (IP) cefazolin or cephalothin in every PD fluid bag, together with once-daily gentamicin. In view of the inherent impracticalities of this regimen, we studied the efficacy of once-daily cefazolin (1.5 g) IP with gentamicin IP as initial treatment for primary (nonrecurrent) PD peritonitis. This regimen has been used in all episodes of peritonitis not associated with tunnel or exit-site infections or fluid leaks. Sixty-nine episodes in 61 patients were analyzed (44 patients, continuous ambulatory PD; 22 patients, automated PD; and 3 patients, hospital-based intermittent PD), of which 38 episodes (55%) were gram-positive infections, 6 episodes (9%) were gram-negative infections, and 18 episodes (26%) had negative culture results. Four patients died within 4 weeks of infection (none considered attributable to inadequate treatment of their peritonitis). Ten catheters (14.5%) required removal to clear the infection; 7 catheters were in patients with gram-negative infections. The relapse rate within 4 weeks of ceasing antibiotic therapy was 8.9%. Compared with the results of 40 episodes of peritonitis treated initially with our previous IP vancomycin and gentamicin regimen, successful treatment (no death, catheter removal, or recurrence) was achieved in 52 of 69 episodes in the cefazolin group (75.4%) versus 23 of 40 episodes in the vancomycin group (57.5%; P: = 0.058). In conclusion, once-daily IP cefazolin and gentamicin for the initial treatment of PD peritonitis is at least as effective as a vancomycin-based regimen and is well tolerated.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11136167 DOI: 10.1053/ajkd.2001.20581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Kidney Dis ISSN: 0272-6386 Impact factor: 8.860