| Literature DB >> 2949286 |
F Calvo, H de Castro, P Brice.
Abstract
Two hundred and fifty patients (mean age 39 years) were involved in a multicentric pilot trial aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of a piperacillin (P) + amikacin (A) combination in severe neutropenic patients (less than 500 PNN/microliters). In patients who failed to improve under this combination vancomycin (V) was added. Two hundred and thirty-five patients were assessable for response to P + A. The infection was microbiologically undocumented in 148 of them (63%) and documented in 87 (37%). Response rates were 64% and 53% respectively, rising to 73% in both groups after addition of vancomycin. Thirty p. 100 of the patients had bacteremia. The most frequently encountered pathogens were staphylococci, enterobacteria, streptococci and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Sixty-six p. 100 of gram-negative and staphylococcal infections responded to the P + A combination, while the response rate of staphylococcal infections was 23%. Fifty-seven p. 100 of staphylococci resistant to P + A were controlled by P + A + V. Fifteen (6.4%) patients died of infection, 5 of them of fungal infection. Toxicity was mild, with 3% renal toxicity. The P + A combination is effective as first line therapy in febrile neutropenic patients. These results and epidemiological data suggest that this combination plus vancomycin would be a suitable second line therapy for patients who did not improve.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 2949286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Presse Med ISSN: 0755-4982 Impact factor: 1.228