Literature DB >> 15231900

Measurement of interleukin 8 in combination with C-reactive protein reduced unnecessary antibiotic therapy in newborn infants: a multicenter, randomized, controlled trial.

Axel R Franz1, Karl Bauer, Andreas Schalk, Suzanne M Garland, Ellen D Bowman, Kerstin Rex, Calle Nyholm, Mikael Norman, Adel Bougatef, Martina Kron, Walter Andreas Mihatsch, Frank Pohlandt.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Neonatal bacterial infections carry a high mortality when diagnosed late. Early diagnosis is difficult because initial clinical signs are nonspecific. Consequently, physicians frequently prescribe antibiotic treatment to newborn infants for fear of missing a life-threatening infection. This study was designed to test the hypotheses that a diagnostic algorithm that includes measurements of interleukin 8 (IL-8) and C-reactive protein (CRP) 1) reduces antibiotic therapy and 2) does not result in more initially missed infections compared with standard management that does not include an IL-8 measurement.
METHODS: Term and preterm infants who were <72 hours of age and had clinical signs or obstetric risk factors suggesting neonatal bacterial infection but stable enough to wait for results of diagnostic tests were enrolled into the study. A total of 1291 infants were randomly assigned to receive antibiotic therapy according to the guidelines of each center (standard group) or to receive antibiotic therapy when IL-8 was >70 pg/mL and/or CRP was >10 mg/L (IL-8 group). The primary outcome variables were 1) the number of infants treated with antibiotics and 2) the number of infants with infections missed at the initial evaluation.
RESULTS: In the IL-8 group, fewer infants received antibiotic therapy than in the standard group (36.1% [237 of 656] vs 49.6% [315 of 635]). In the IL-8 group, 24 (14.5%) of 165 infants with infection were not detected at the initial evaluation, compared with 28 (17.3%) of 162 in the standard group.
CONCLUSIONS: The number of newborn infants who received postnatal antibiotic therapy can be reduced with a diagnostic algorithm that includes measurements of IL-8 and CRP. This diagnostic strategy seemed to be safe.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15231900     DOI: 10.1542/peds.114.1.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


  35 in total

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Review 4.  Diagnostics for neonatal sepsis: current approaches and future directions.

Authors:  Pui-Ying Iroh Tam; Catherine M Bendel
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Review 6.  Challenges and opportunities for antibiotic stewardship among preterm infants.

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Authors:  Sameer J Patel; Lisa Saiman
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8.  Clinical signs to identify late-onset sepsis in preterm infants.

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9.  Umbilical cord blood procalcitonin level in early neonatal infections: a 4-year university hospital cohort study.

Authors:  N Joram; J-B Muller; S Denizot; J-L Orsonneau; J Caillon; J-C Rozé; C Gras-Le Guen
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Review 10.  Accounting for multiple births in neonatal and perinatal trials: systematic review and case study.

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