| Literature DB >> 27180242 |
D Rodriguez-Pardo1, C Pigrau2, D Campany3, V Diaz-Brito4, L Morata5, I C de Diego6, L Sorlí7, S Iftimie8, R Pérez-Vidal9, G García-Pardo10, T Larrainzar-Coghen11, B Almirante11.
Abstract
Switching from intravenous to oral antibiotic therapy may improve inpatient management and reduce hospital stays and the complications of intravenous treatment. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of intravenous-to-oral antibiotic switch therapy and an early discharge algorithm in hospitalized patients with gram-positive infection. We performed a prospective cohort study with a retrospective comparison cohort, recruited from eight tertiary, acute-care Spanish referral hospitals. All patients included had culture-confirmed methicillin-resistant gram-positive infection, or methicillin-susceptible gram-positive infection and beta-lactam allergy and had received intravenous treatment with glycopeptides, lipopeptides, or linezolid. The study comprised two cohorts: the prospective cohort to assess the effectiveness of a sequential intravenous-to-oral antibiotic switch algorithm and early discharge, and a retrospective cohort in which the algorithm had not been applied, used as the comparator. A total of 247 evaluable patients were included; 115 in the prospective and 132 in the retrospective cohort. Forty-five retrospective patients (34 %) were not changed to oral antibiotics, and 87 (66 %) were changed to oral antibiotics without following the proposed algorithm. The duration of hospitalization was significantly shorter in the prospective cohort compared to the retrospective group that did not switch to oral drugs (16.7 ± 18.7 vs 23 ± 13.4 days, P < 0.001). No differences were observed regarding the incidence of catheter-related bacteraemia (4.4 % vs 2.6 %, P = 0.621). Our results suggest that an intravenous-to-oral antibiotic switch strategy is effective for reducing the length of hospital stay in selected hospitalized patients with gram-positive infection.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27180242 PMCID: PMC4947095 DOI: 10.1007/s10096-016-2661-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis ISSN: 0934-9723 Impact factor: 3.267
Fig. 1Algorithm for intravenous-to-oral switch therapy and early discharge
Fig. 2Patients included in the study
Comparison between patients in the retrospective cohort who did not change to oral antibiotics and patients in the prospective cohort
| Retrospective cohort | Prospective cohort |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years, mean (SD) | 69.2 (16.9) | 66.1 (16.2) | 0.221 |
| Sex, male | 27 (60) | 64 (55.7) | 0.723 |
| Patients hospitalized in previous 6 months | 21 (46.7) | 61 (53.0) | 0.487 |
| Site of infection | |||
| Catheter-related infections | 15 (33.3) | 5 (4.3) | <0.001 |
| Urinary tract infections | 8 (17.8) | 8 (7) | <0.074 |
| Skin and soft-tissue infections | 6 (13.3) | 21 (18.3) | 0.639 |
| Respiratory infections | 5 (11.1) | 4 (3.5) | 0.118 |
| Osteoarticular infectionsa | 2 (4.4) | 71 (61.7) | <0.001 |
| Abscess | 0 | 3 (1.9) | 0.001 |
| Other infectionsb | 9 (20) | 3 (2.6) | 0.560 |
| Positive blood culture | 26 (57.8) | 16 (13.9) | <0.001 |
| Microbiological aetiologyc | |||
| Methicillin-resistant | 15 (33.3) | 54 (47) | 0.118 |
| Methicillin-susceptible | 0 | 4 (3.5) | 0.577 |
| Methicillin-resistant coagulase-negative staphylococci | 14 (31.1) | 44 (38.3) | 0.398 |
| Methicillin-susceptible coagulase-negative staphylococcid | 3 (6.7) | 4 (3.5) | 0.375 |
| Ampicillin-resistant | 11 (24.4) | 10 (8.7) | 0.008 |
| Ampicillin-susceptible | 1 (2.2) | 3 (2.6) | 0.888 |
|
| 1 (2.2) | 0 | 0.281 |
| Length of IV antibiotics, days, mean (SD) | 14.2 (9.3) | 7.8 (4.5) | <0.001 |
| Length of hospital stay, days, mean (SD)e | 23 (13.4) | 16.7 (18.7) | <0.001 |
| Treatment catheter-related infection | 2 (4.4) | 3 (2.6) | 0.621 |
| Related mortality | 1 (2.2) | 1 (0.9) | >0.999 |
Values are expressed as n (%) unless otherwise indicated
a63 of 73 osteoarticular infections were prosthetic joint infections or osteosynthesis infections, and ten osteoarticular infections were chronic osteomyelitis
bOther infections include five primary bacteraemia, three peritonitis, two cholangitis, one empyema and one pacemaker-associated infection
cFour patients included in the prospective cohort had polymicrobial infection due to two different gram-positive isolates. Therefore, 119 isolates were identified in the prospective cohort
dIn patients with beta-lactam allergy
eLength of hospital stay from diagnosis of gram-positive infection to hospital discharge or death
Patients in the prospective cohort who required hospital readmission due to the infection and changed back to IV antibiotic treatment
| N | Type of infection | Causative microorganisms | Initial IV antibiotic | Oral antibiotic | Reason for readmission | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Knee PJI | CONS | DAP | CLIN+RF |
| Antibiotics were not reintroduced |
| 2 | Cellulitis | MRSA, GNB | VAN+CIP | COT+ CIP | Persistence of infection | Surgical debridement |
| 3 | Knee PJIa | CONS | VAN | LIN | Persistence of PJI | 2-stage removal |
| 4 | Chronic osteomyelitis | CONS | TEICO | LIN+RF | Persistence of infection | New surgery |
| 5 | Knee PJIa | MRSA | DAP | LIN+RF | Persistence of PJI | 2-stage removal |
| 6 | Shoulder PJIa | CONS | VAN | COT+ RF | Persistence of PJI | 2-stage removal |
| 7 | Chronic osteomyelitis | CONS | TEICO | LIN | Persistence of infection+GNB superinfection | New surgery |
| 8 | Knee PJI | CONS | DAP | LIN | Persistence of infection | New surgical approach |
PJI prosthetic joint infection, CONS coagulase-negative staphylococci, MRSA methicillin-resistant S. aureus, GNB gram-negative bacilli, MSSA methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (in patients with beta lactam allergy), DAP daptomycin, CLIN clindamycin, RF rifampicin, VAN vancomycin, CIP Ciprofloxacin, COT Cotrimoxazole, LIN linezolid, TEICO teicoplanin
aThree patients diagnosed with PJI had been previously treated with debridement, antibiotics, and implant retention, but this strategy failed and all of them required prosthesis removal using a two-stage approach