| Literature DB >> 27076583 |
Simon Tiberi1, Giovanni Sotgiu2, Lia D'Ambrosio3, Rosella Centis4, Marcos Abdo Arbex5, Edith Alarcon Arrascue6, Jan Willem Alffenaar7, Jose A Caminero8, Mina Gaga9, Gina Gualano10, Alena Skrahina11, Ivan Solovic12, Giorgia Sulis13, Marina Tadolini14, Valentina Alarcon Guizado15, Saverio De Lorenzo16, Aurora Jazmín Roby Arias17, Anna Scardigli18, Onno W Akkerman19, Alena Aleksa20, Janina Artsukevich20, Vera Auchynka11, Eduardo Henrique Bonini5, Félix Antonio Chong Marín17, Lorena Collahuazo López17, Gerard de Vries21, Simone Dore22, Heinke Kunst23, Alberto Matteelli13, Charalampos Moschos9, Fabrizio Palmieri10, Apostolos Papavasileiou9, Marie-Christine Payen24, Andrea Piana22, Antonio Spanevello25, Dante Vargas Vasquez26, Pietro Viggiani16, Veronica White27, Alimuddin Zumla28, Giovanni Battista Migliori29.
Abstract
No large study to date has ever evaluated the effectiveness, safety and tolerability of imipenem/clavulanate versus meropenem/clavulanate to treat multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR- and XDR-TB). The aim of this observational study was to compare the therapeutic contribution of imipenem/clavulanate versus meropenem/clavulanate added to background regimens to treat MDR- and XDR-TB cases.84 patients treated with imipenem/clavulanate-containing regimens showed a similar median number of antibiotic resistances (8 versus 8) but more fluoroquinolone resistance (79.0% versus 48.9%, p<0.0001) and higher XDR-TB prevalence (67.9% versus 49.0%, p=0.01) in comparison with 96 patients exposed to meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimens. Patients were treated with imipenem/clavulanate- and meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimens for a median (interquartile range) of 187 (60-428) versus 85 (49-156) days, respectively.Statistically significant differences were observed on sputum smear and culture conversion rates (79.7% versus 94.8%, p=0.02 and 71.9% versus 94.8%, p<0.0001, respectively) and on success rates (59.7% versus 77.5%, p=0.03). Adverse events to imipenem/clavulanate and meropenem/clavulanate were reported in 5.4% and 6.5% of cases only.Our study suggests that meropenem/clavulanate is more effective than imipenem/clavulanate in treating MDR/XDR-TB patients.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27076583 DOI: 10.1183/13993003.00214-2016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671