| Literature DB >> 25367409 |
W R Heizmann1, P-A Löschmann, C Eckmann, C von Eiff, K-F Bodmann, C Petrik.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Tigecycline is an established treatment option for infections with multiresistant bacteria (MRB). It retains activity against many strains with limited susceptibility to other antibiotics. Efficacy and safety of tigecycline as monotherapy or in combination regimens were investigated in a prospective noninterventional study involving 1,025 severely ill patients in clinical routine at 137 German hospitals.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25367409 PMCID: PMC4315528 DOI: 10.1007/s15010-014-0691-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infection ISSN: 0300-8126 Impact factor: 3.553
Patient demographics, comorbidities and severity scores at baseline
| Patient demographics | Total population | Patients with MRB |
|---|---|---|
| Number of patients, | 1,025 | 256 |
| Demographic characteristics | ||
| Male, % ( | 62.8 % (642) | 64.8 % (166) |
| Age, mean years ± SD (range) | 64.4 ± 13.7 (18–94) | 66.5 ± 12.0 (19–88) |
| Clinical characteristics | ||
| BMI, mean, kg/m2 ± SD (range) | 27.7 ± 6.5 (14–90) | 28.4 ± 7.0 (14.6–58.8) |
| Treatment on ICU, % ( | 53.2 % (545) | 41.8 % (107) |
| History of prior antibiotics, % ( | 84.5 % (864) | 83.2 % (213) |
| Comorbidity, % ( | 96.5 % (989) | 96.1 % (246) |
| APACHE II score >15, % ( | 64.9 % (607) | 68.4 % (162) |
| APACHE II score, mean (median) | 18.8 (18.0) | 19.4 (19.0) |
| Patients with treatment on ICU | 20.0 (20.0) | 21.4 (21.0) |
| Patients with treatment outside ICU | 17.3 (17.0) | 17.9 (18.0) |
Distribution of multiresistant bacteria by site of infection (patients with evaluable treatment outcome; n = 215)
| Drug-resistance phenotype, % ( | Patients with documented MRB infection | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Any MRB | VRE | MRSA | ESBL | |
| Total MRB population | 100 % (215) | 19.5 % (42) | 61.4 % (132) | 31.2 % (67) |
| Intraabdominal infection (cIAI) | 32.6 % (70) | 38.6 % (27) | 27.1 % (19) | 50.0 % (35) |
| Skin and soft tissue infection (cSSTI) | 25.6 % (55) | 5.5 % (3) | 90.9 % (50) | 7.3 % (4) |
| Diabetic foot infection (DFI) | 14.0 % (30) | −(0) | 100.0 % (30) | 10.0 % (3) |
| Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) | 6.0 % (13) | 7.7 % (1) | 84.6 % (11) | 38.5 % (5) |
| Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) | 14.0 % (30) | −(0) | 70.0 % (21) | 30.0 % (9) |
| Blood stream infection (BSI) | 10.2 % (22) | 18.2 % (4) | 68.2 % (15) | 36.4 % (8) |
| Multiple-site infection (MSI) | 12.6 % (27) | 14.8 % (4) | 63.0 % (17) | 44.4 % (12) |
Patients could have more than one MRB
Mode of therapy in patients with multiresistant pathogens by site of infection (patients with evaluable treatment outcome; n = 215)
| Proportion of patients, % ( | Monotherapy | Combination therapy |
|---|---|---|
| Total MRB population | 65.1 % (140) | 34.9 % (75) |
| Intraabdominal infection (cIAI) | 28.6 % (40) | 40.0 % (30) |
| Skin and soft tissue infection (cSSTI) | 31.4 % (44) | 14.7 % (11) |
| Diabetic foot infection (DFI) | 19.3 % (27) | 4.0 % (3) |
| Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) | 8.6 % (12) | 1.3 % (1) |
| Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) | 13.6 % (19) | 14.7 % (11) |
| Blood stream infection (BSI) | 12.9 % (18) | 5.3 % (4) |
| Multiple-site infection (MSI) | 9.3 % (13) | 18.7 % (14) |
Patients could have more than one MRB; 2 patients with HAP were diagnosed with BSI as well, these were not categorized as MSI because the lung infection was regarded as the focus of BSI
Antibiotics most commonly administered in combination with tigecycline (patients with evaluable treatment outcome; n = 215)
| Antibiotic agent | Patients, % ( |
|---|---|
| All agents | 34.9 %(75) |
| Ceftazidime | 11.2 %(24) |
| Carbapenem (meropenem, imipenem) | 5.6 %(12) |
| Fluoroquinolone (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) | 4.7 %(10) |
| Metronidazole | 3.7 % (8) |
| Piperacillin (±tazobactam) | 1.9 % (4) |
| Vancomycin | 1.4 % (3) |
| Cefepime | 1.4 % (3) |
| Sulbactam | 0.9 % (2) |
| Clindamycin | 0.9 % (2) |
| Gentamicin | 0.9 % (2) |
| Others | 2.3 % (5) |
Treatment success rates (cure + improvement) in patients with multiresistant pathogens by drug-resistance phenotype (patients with evaluable treatment outcome; n = 215)
| Treatment success % ( | Patients with documented MRB infection | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Any MRB | VRE | MRSA | ESBL | |
| Total MRB population | 91.6 % (197/215) | 97.6 % (41/42) | 90.2 % (120/132) | 91.0 % (61/67) |
| Intraabdominal infection (cIAI) | 91.4 % (64/70) | 96.3 % (26/27) | 89.5 % (17/19) | 91.4 % (32/35) |
| Skin and soft tissue infection (cSSTI) | 94.5 % (52/55) | 100 % (3/3) | 94.0 % (47/50) | 100 % (4/4) |
| Diabetic foot infection (DFI) | 83.3 % (25/30) | −(0/0) | 83.3 % (25/30) | 66.6 % (2/3) |
| Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) | 100 % (13/13) | 100 % (1/1) | 100 % (11/11) | 100 % (5/5) |
| Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) | 86.7 % (26/30) | −(0/0) | 85.7 % (18/21) | 88.8 % (8/9) |
| Blood stream infection (BSI) | 100 % (22/22) | 100 % (4/4) | 100 % (15/15) | 100 % (8/8) |
| Multiple-site infection (MSI) | 81.5 % (22/27) | 100 % (4/4) | 76.5 % (13/17) | 83.3 % (10/12) |
Patients could have more than one MRB
Treatment success rates (cure + improvement) in patients with multiresistant pathogens by mode of therapy (patients with evaluable outcome; n = 215)
| Treatment success % ( | Monotherapy | Combination therapy |
|---|---|---|
| Total MRB population | 93.6 % (131/140) | 88.0 % (66/75) |
| Intraabdominal infection (sIAI) | 90.0 % (36/40) | 93.3 % (28/30) |
| Skin and soft tissue infection (cSSTI) | 93.2 % (41/44) | 100 % (11/11) |
| Diabetic foot infection (DFI) | 88.9 % (24/27) | 33.3 % (1/3) |
| Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) | 100 % (12/12) | 100 % (1/1) |
| Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) | 94.7 % (18/19) | 72.7 % (8/11) |
| Blood stream infection (BSI) | 100 % (18/18) | 100 % (4/4) |
| Multiple-site infection (MSI) | 92.3 % (12/13) | 71.4 % (10/14) |
Fig. 1Treatment success rates (cure + improvement) in patients with multiresistant pathogens a Monotherapy, b combination therapy. IAI intraabdominal infection, BSI blood stream infection, CAP community-acquired pneumonia, DFI diabetic foot infection, HAP hospital-acquired pneumonia, MSI multiple-site infection, SSTI skin and soft tissue infection