| Literature DB >> 26719847 |
Nicholas W Carris1, Joe Pardo2, Jose Montero3, Kristy M Shaeer4.
Abstract
Doxycycline, a commonly prescribed tetracycline, remains on intermittent shortage. We systematically reviewed the literature to assess minocycline as an alternative to doxycycline in select conditions, given doxycycline's continued shortage. We identified 19 studies, 10 of which were published before 2000. Thirteen of the studies were prospective, but only 1 of these studies was randomized. Based on the available data, we found minocycline to be a reasonable substitute for doxycycline in the following scenarios: skin and soft-tissue infections and outpatient treatment of community-acquired pneumonia in young, otherwise healthy patients or in patients with macrolide-resistant Mycoplasma pneumoniae, as well as Lyme disease prophylaxis and select rickettsial disease should doxycycline be unavailable.Entities:
Keywords: alternatives; doxycycline; minocycline; shortage; substitution
Year: 2015 PMID: 26719847 PMCID: PMC4690502 DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofv178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis ISSN: 2328-8957 Impact factor: 3.835
Figure 1.Molecular structures of doxycycline and minocycline [7, 9].
Review of Literature on Patients Treated With Minocycline for Selected Diseases States
| Study/Sample Size | Design/ Setting | Population/Condition/Age; | Reported | Outcome(s) | Potential for Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skin and soft tissue infections | |||||
| Cappel and Klastersky [ | Retrospective/inpatient/ Belgium | Disseminated malignancy | Minocycline (route not reported) | Cure: | Retrospective; small sample size |
| Phair et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/ outpatient/United States | Purulent SSTI, identified | Minocycline (PO) | Cure: | Uncontrolled study |
| Raff et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/not reported/United States | Severe (investigator reported) | Minocycline (PO) | Cure: | Uncontrolled study |
| Clumeck et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/ inpatient/Belgium | Severe | Minocycline + rifampin | SSTI Cure: | Uncontrolled study; small sample size |
| Ruhe et al [ | Retrospective/inpatient/United States | Serious, tetracycline-susceptible MRSA infection | Cure: | Retrospective; small sample size | |
| Barnes et al [ | Retrospective review with prospective observation/outpatient/United States | Nonserious; MRSA-SSTI; cellulitis, abscess, or both | Cure: | Retrospective/observational; small sample size | |
| Ruhe and Menon [ | Retrospective/ outpatient/United States | Community-acquired purulent | Minocycline (PO); N = 3 or | Cure: | Retrospective |
| Rogers et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/ inpatient/United States | Severe (investigator reported) infections | Minocycline (IV) | Cure: | Uncontrolled, small sample size |
| Community-acquired pneumonia | |||||
| Kawai et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/inpatient or outpatient/Japan | Minocycline required for 15 patients with macrolide treatment failure | Defervesce within | Uncontrolled study; only included confirmed | |
| Okada et al [ | Prospective observational/ inpatient or outpatient/Japan | Secondary agent used in macrolide resistance: | Defervesce within 48 H: | Observational study; only included confirmed | |
| Kawai et al [ | Prospective observational/ inpatient or outpatient/Japan | Definitive treatment in macrolide resistance: | Defervesce within 48 H: | Observational study; only included confirmed | |
| Miyashita et al [ | Prospective observational/ inpatient or outpatient/Japan | Initial treatment in macrolide resistance: | Defervesce within 48 H: | Observational study; only included confirmed | |
| Lyme disease | |||||
| Weber et al [ | Prospective, nonrandomized intervention/not reported/Germany | Early erythema migrans, N = 97 | Time to cure (weeks): | Nonrandomized; small sample size | |
| Muellegger et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/not reported/Austria | Erythema migrans, Borrelia | Minocycline (PO); N = 14 | Good clinical response: | Uncontrolled; small sample size |
| Breier et al [ | Prospective open label randomized/outpatient/Austria | Erythema migrans | Minocycline, N = 30 | Both groups: | Withdraw due to side effects (minocycline, 12; penicillin V, 9) excluded from analysis |
| Schmidt et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/not reported/Austria | Erythema migrans | Minocycline (PO) | 8 wks post therapy: | Uncontrolled; small sample size |
| Stanek et al [ | Prospective uncontrolled/outpatient/Austria | Erythema migrans | Minocycline (PO) | Complete resolution in all patients within 3 wks | Uncontrolled; limited report of clinical outcomes |
| Glatz et al [ | Retrospective/not reported/ | Erythema migrans | Minocycline (PO), N = 61* | Complete symptom resolution within 1 mo: | Retrospective; variable antibiotic treatment |
| Rickettsial infections | |||||
| Kodama et al [ | Retrospective/inpatient/Japan | Japanese spotted fever | Cure: | Retrospective, small sample size | |
Abbreviations: CAP, community-acquired pneumonia; DOT, duration of therapy; H, hours; IV, intravenous; MRSA, methicillin-resistant S aureus; PNA, pneumonia; PO, per oral; PRN, as needed; Q, every; SSTI, skin and soft-tissue infections; Trim/sulfa, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole.
a Values calculated from data presented in Table 1 of Arch Dermatol 2006;142(7):862–868.
Figure 2.Flow diagram of study selection.