| Literature DB >> 25405992 |
Charles-Edouard Luyt, Nicolas Bréchot, Jean-Louis Trouillet, Jean Chastre.
Abstract
The rapid emergence and dissemination of antimicrobial-resistant microorganisms in ICUs worldwide constitute a problem of crisis dimensions. The root causes of this problem are multifactorial, but the core issues are clear. The emergence of antibiotic resistance is highly correlated with selective pressure resulting from inappropriate use of these drugs. Appropriate antibiotic stewardship in ICUs includes not only rapid identification and optimal treatment of bacterial infections in these critically ill patients, based on pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic characteristics, but also improving our ability to avoid administering unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotics, shortening the duration of their administration, and reducing the numbers of patients receiving undue antibiotic therapy. Either we will be able to implement such a policy or we and our patients will face an uncontrollable surge of very difficult-to-treat pathogens.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25405992 PMCID: PMC4281952 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-014-0480-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Pathophysiological changes commonly observed in critically ill patients and their effects on drug concentrations. Reproduced with permission from Elsevier Limited [75]. ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; RRT, renal replacement therapy.
Figure 2Achievement of pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic targets in intensive care unit patients according to antibiotics used. Data are expressed as percentage of patients achieving target. Doses for each antibiotic are given as a median. This figure was drawn from data in Table 3 of [5] with permission from Oxford Journals. 50% fT > MIC, free drug concentration maintained above minimum inhibitory concentration of the known or suspected pathogen for at least 50% of dosing interval; 50% fT > 4 × MIC, free drug concentration maintained above a concentration fourfold higher than the minimum inhibitory concentration of the known or suspected pathogen for at least 50% of dosing interval; 100% fT > MIC, free drug concentration maintained above minimum inhibitory concentration of the known or suspected pathogen throughout the entire dosing interval; 100% fT > 4 × MIC, free drug concentration maintained above a concentration fourfold higher than the minimum inhibitory concentration of the known or suspected pathogen throughout the entire dosing interval.
Figure 3Duration of antibiotic treatment of the first episode in the PRORATA trial, according to infection site. White bars indicate patients included in the control group. Hatched bars indicate patients included in the procalcitonin-guided group. This figure was drawn from data in Table 2 of [37] with permission from Elsevier Limited. CAP, community-acquired pneumonia; PRORATA, Use of Procalcitonin to Reduce Patients’ Exposure to Antibiotics in Intensive Care Units; UTI, urinary tract infection; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia.
A personal care bundle for optimizing antimicrobial treatment for intensive care unit patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia
|
|
|
|---|---|
| Step 1: Obtain bronchoalveolar specimens for Gram staining and cultures before introducing new antibiotics. | Every effort should be made to obtain reliable specimens from the specific infection site for direct microscope examination and cultures in order to enable de-escalation. |
| Step 2: Start antibiotics less than 2 hours after bronchoalveolar lavage. | Time to appropriate antimicrobial administration is a major outcome determinant for intensive care unit patients with severe bacterial infections. |
| Step 3: Start therapy using broad-spectrum antibiotics unless no risk factors for resistant pathogens are present. | Owing to the emergence of multiresistant GNB (for example, |
| Step 4: Stop therapy on day 3 if infection becomes unlikely. | Antibiotics can be discontinued very early when VAP diagnosis becomes highly unlikely based on negative cultures and clinical course and the elimination of an extrapulmonary infection. |
| Step 5: Use pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic data to optimize treatment. | Clinical and bacteriological outcomes can be improved by optimizing the therapeutic regimen according to pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic properties of the selected agents. |
| Step 6: Streamline antibiotic therapy by using narrower-spectrum antibiotics once the etiological agent is identified. | For many patients with VAP, including those with late-onset infections, therapy can be narrowed once respiratory tract and blood culture results become available, either because an anticipated bacterium (for example, |
| Step 7: Switch to monotherapy on days 3 to 5. | Using a two-antibiotic regimen for more than 3 to 5 days has no clinical benefits, provided that initial therapy was appropriate, the clinical course evolves favorably, and microbiological data exclude difficult-to-treat microorganisms. |
| Step 8: Shorten the treatment duration based on procalcitonin kinetics. | Shorter antibiotic administration for patients with VAP has achieved good outcomes with less antibiotic consumption. Prolonged therapy leads to colonization with antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which may precede recurrent VAP episodes. |
ESBL, extended-spectrum β-lactamase; GNB, Gram-negative bacilli; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia.