| Literature DB >> 30884839 |
Mark Biagi1, David Butler2, Xing Tan3, Samah Qasmieh4, Eric Wenzler5.
Abstract
Despite advancements in therapy, pneumonia remains the leading cause of death due to infectious diseases. Novel treatment strategies are desperately needed to optimize the antimicrobial therapy of patients suffering from this disease. One such strategy that has recently garnered significant attention is the use of inhaled antibiotics to rapidly achieve therapeutic concentrations directly at the site of infection. In particular, there is significant interest in the role of inhaled polymyxins for the treatment of nosocomial pneumonia, including ventilator-associated pneumonia, due to their retained activity against multi-drug resistant Gram-negative pathogens, including Acinetobacter baumannii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This review will provide a comprehensive overview of the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic profile, clinical outcomes, safety, and potential role of inhaled polymyxins in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: HAP; VAP; colistin; inhaled antibiotics; pneumonia; polymyxin
Year: 2019 PMID: 30884839 PMCID: PMC6466860 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics8010027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1CMS (top panels) and colistin (bottom panels) concentrations in ELF (open squares) and plasma (filled triangles) following a single dose via aerosol or IV administration at steady state. Reprinted with permission from Boisson et al [35].
Summary of studies evaluating inhaled colistin without concomitant IV colistin for Gram-negative nosocomial pneumonia and/or ventilator-associated pneumonia.
| Ref | Study Design | Patient Population | Comparator Group(s) | Inhaled Group(s) | Duration (Days) A | Clinical Outcome(s) | Toxicity | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Prospective, observational | MDR VAP caused by | MDR VAP: Inhaled colistin + IV aminoglycoside ( | 5 MU q8h ( | 12 B | No significant differences in clinical outcomes between patients with MDR VAP treated with inhaled colistin with or without IV aminoglycoside and patients with susceptible VAP | Serum creatinine remained stable during treatment in both groups | All patients in MDR VAP group received inappropriate empiric therapy |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR NP caused by COS | None | 1 MU BID ( | 14 | Clinical cure or improvement: 57.1% | Bronchoconstriction: ( | Seven patients cured of pneumonia subsequently died of underlying and unrelated conditions |
| [ | Retrospective | NP/VAP ( | None | 1 MU q8h ( | 7.2 | Clinical success: 80% | NR | All patients received additional systemic antibiotics that were resistant |
| [ | Retrospective | COS | None | 75 mg BID ± systemic antibiotics | 17 (5–31) | Clinical cure or improvement: 83.3% | Hypersensitivity: ( | Most patients received concomitant systemic antibiotics and all patients received other broad-spectrum antibiotics prior to initiation of colistin |
| [ | Retrospective | XDR | Inhaled colistin + IV tigecycline ( | 2 MU BID ( | 13.5 ± 6.5 C | No significant difference in clinical outcomes, microbiological eradication, or 30-day mortality | Bronchospasm: ( | Isolates in the inhaled colistin only group were significantly more likely to be tigecycline-resistant |
| [ | Retrospective | Systemic antibiotics ( | 80 mg q12h ( | 9.1 (4–22) | All patients in both groups were cured and subsequently discharged | NR | Four pre-term infants in the inhaled colistin received active systemic antibiotics for 12–21 days without improvement prior to inhaled colistin monotherapy | |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR | Tigecycline ( | 2 MU BID ( | NR | Significantly higher eradication rate in patients receiving inhaled colistin monotherapy compared to IV therapy only (61.1% vs. 29.6%; | NR | Patients receiving inhaled colistin were significantly more likely to have colonization |
| [ | Retrospective, case-controlled | XDR | Inhaled colistin + tigecycline ( | 2 MU TID ( | 12.2 ± 6 E | No difference in 30-day mortality | Bronchospasm: ( | Majority of patients received systemic antibiotics prior to enrollment |
Abbreviations: MDR: multidrug-resistant; VAP: ventilator-associated pneumonia; q8h: every 8 h; NP: nosocomial pneumonia; COS: colistin-only susceptible; BID: twice daily; TID: three times daily: QID: four times daily; q6h: every 6 h; NR: not reported; XDR: extensively drug-resistant; q12h: every 12 h; A Presented as means, means ± standard deviations, or median (range); B Reported for all patients receiving inhaled colistin with or without an aminoglycoside (n = 43); C Reported for all patients with pneumonia who received inhaled colistin with or without systemic antibiotics (n = 57); D Reported for all patients with pneumonia or colonization who received inhaled colistin with or without systemic antibiotics (n = 118); both episodes of bronchospasm occurred in patients with underlying chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases; E Reported for all patients receiving inhaled colistin with or without tigecycline (n = 212).
Summary of studies evaluating inhaled colistin as adjunctive therapy to IV colistin for Gram-negative nosocomial pneumonia and/or ventilator-associated pneumonia.
| Ref | Study Design | Patient Population | Comparator Group(s) | Inhaled Group(s) | Duration (days) A | Clinical Outcome(s) | Inhaled Toxicity | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Retrospective, | COS VAP ( | IV colistin ( | 1 MU q8h + IV colistin | 7 | Improved clinical cure in inhaled-antibiotic group; no significant difference in microbiological cure | NR | Concomitant systemic antibiotics not described |
| [ | Retrospective, | MDR VAP ( | IV colistin ( | 1 MU q12h + IV colistin ( | 13 (5–56) F | Improved clinical | NR | No detail provided on concomitant systemic antibiotics |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR | IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | Inhaled and IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | NR | Significantly higher clinical response and eradication rates with inhaled therapy | No significant difference in rate of nephrotoxicity | No data on dose or duration of inhaled colistin therapy |
| [ | Retrospective, case-controlled | IV colistin + systemic antibiotics ( | 75 mg q12h + IV colistin + systemic antibiotics ( | 11.2 ± 6 C | No differences in clinical success, microbiological eradication, or mortality | No significant difference in rate of nephrotoxicity | No assessment of disease severity | |
| [ | Prospective, randomized | VAP ( | IV colistin + imipenem ( | 4 MU TID + imipenem ( | ≥14 B | No significant difference in clinical cure; decreased time to microbiological eradication with inhaled therapy | Bronchospasm: ( | Clinical cure rates in a subset of patients receiving colistin monotherapy were 84% and 58% ( |
| [ | Retrospective | CRAB VAP ( | IV colistin + systemic antibiotics ( | 75 mg q12h − 150 mg q8h + systemic antibiotics ( | 17 | Significantly lower rates of clinical failure, ICU mortality, and AKI with inhaled colistin | NR | Patients receiving inhaled colistin were significantly more likely to receive active concomitant antibiotics and less likely to have septic shock |
| [ | Prospective, | MDR VAP ( | None | 1 MU TID + systemic antibiotics B | 16.4 ± 10.9 | Clinical improvement: 83.3% | NR | No comparator group; |
| [ | Randomized, placebo controlled | VAP ( | Placebo inhalation + systemic antibiotics ( | 75 mg q12h + systemic antibiotics ( | 9.5 ± 4.6 | No difference in clinical outcome; improved microbiological outcome with inhaled colistin | Bronchospasm: ( | Clinical and microbiological outcomes evaluated at 28 days |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR | IV colistin ( | 75 mg BID + IV colistin ( | 14 | No difference in clinical or microbiological outcome at day 5 or end of therapy | NR | 87% of patients with severe sepsis/septic shock at baseline |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR | IV colistin + β-lactam ( | 2 MU TID + β-lactam ( | IV + inhaled: 19.3 (3–46) | 78% favorable response with IV + inhaled vs. 100% for inhaled alone and 40% for IV alone; no patients achieved microbiological eradication | NR | 56% of patients on IV and inhaled colistin also had extrapulmonary infection |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR | None | Mean daily dose of 4.29 MU + IV colistin + systemic antibiotics | 10.29 | Favorable clinical outcome: 57.8% | NR | Only 60% had follow-up cultures available |
| [ | Retrospective, multicenter | MDR NP ( | IV colistin + systemic antibiotics ( | 75 or 150 mg q12h + systemic antibiotics ( | 11 | No significant difference in clinical cure, microbiological eradication, or mortality | NR | Clinical cure rate higher in group administered inhaled antibiotic when only patients with high quality respiratory cultures were evaluated |
| [ | Prospective, | MDR | None | 500,000 IU q8h + IV colistin | 15.9 D | Clinical cure: 70% E | NR | Six patients had concomitant co-infections |
| [ | Retrospective | Pneumonia ( | None | 500,000 IU q6h + systemic antibiotics | 12 ± 8 | Microbiological eradication: 93% | NR | Parenteral formulation used for inhalation |
| [ | Retrospective | VAP ( | IV colistin + systemic antibiotics ( | 2.1 MU per day + IV colistin + systemic antibiotics ( | 16.9 ± 9.8 G | Significantly improved clinical cure in group administered inhaled antibiotic; no difference in mortality | NR | Significantly more patients in group administered IV antibiotic only with COS organisms; use of inhaled colistin was independent predictor of clinical cure |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR NP ( | None | 0.5 MU q6h- 2 MU q8h + IV colistin and/or systemicantibiotics | 8.9 (3–19) | Clinical improvement or cure: 87.5% | NR | No uniform inhaled dosing strategy or duration |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR pneumonia ( | IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | Inhaled and IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | NR | Survival rates were 41.1% in patients receiving both inhaled and IV colistin compared to 100% with inhaled colistin only and 66.7% with IV colistin only | NR | Patients in the IV + inhaled colistin group may have had additional sites of infection |
| [ | Retrospective | IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | 500,000 IU q6h-1 MU q8-12h +IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | NR | Microbiological eradication: | NR | 16/31 patients were diagnosed with tracheobronchitis | |
| [ | Prospective | COS VAP ( | None | 1 MU q12h + IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics | 13 ± 6.5 | Clinical cure or improvement: 77.8% | NR | No specific information regarding additional systemic antibiotics administered to patients with VAP |
| [ | Prospective | MDR NP ( | IV colistin ( | 2 MU q12h + IV colistin ( | 12–15 | Clinical failure and mortality significantly higher in the IV colistin group | NR | Concomitant systemic antibiotics not addressed |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR VAP ( | IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | 2 MU BID + IV colistin ( | 10.3 ± 5.72 C | Microbiological eradication significantly higher in the inhaled group | Bronchoconstriction: ( | Some patients also had extrapulmonary sites of infection |
| [ | Retrospective, matched case-control | Systemic antibiotics ( | 2 MU BID + systemic antibiotics ( | 10.9 ± 3.6 | Significantly higher 14-day microbiological eradication with inhaled colistin | No significant differences in incidence of hemodynamic instability, need for intubation, or nephrotoxicity | All isolates were only susceptible to colistin, tigecycline, or sulbactam | |
| [ | Observational cohort | COS | None | 1 MU TID + IV rifampicin | 15 | All patients had clinical and microbiological success | NR | Three patients had concomitant bacteremia |
| [ | Prospective, randomized | VAP ( | Systemic antibiotics ( | 1 MU q8h + systemic antibiotics ( | 5 B | Significantly improved rate of favorable outcomes, 30-day mortality, and clearance of MDR pathogens in inhaled colistin group | NR | Inhaled colistin given only 5 days |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR VAP ( | None | 75 mg QID − 150 mg BID ± systemic antibiotics B | 11.7 ± 7.1 | In-hospital mortality: 40% Microbiological eradication: 84.6% (11/13) | Patients receiving >2 concomitant nephrotoxins significantly more likely to develop AKI | Concomitant systemic antibiotics not fully described |
| [ | Retrospective | MDR | IV colistin ± systemic antibiotics ( | 4.5 MU q8h ± systemic antibiotics ( | 12.6 ± 6.1 | No significant differences between in clinical cure, microbiological eradication, or infectious mortality | Nephrotoxicity significantly lower with inhaled colistin: (15.7% vs. 60.5%; | Patients receiving inhaled colistin were more likely to be older and have higher APACHE II scores |
| [ | Prospective, case-controlled | COS VAP ( | Systemic antibiotics ( | 1 MU q12h + systemic antibiotics ( | 5 B | No significant differences in clinical cure or mortality | NR | Inhaled colistin only administered for 5 days |
| [ | Prospective, randomized, controlled | VAP ( | Systemic antibiotics ( | 2 MU q8h + systemic antibiotics ( | 5 | Significantly higher microbiological eradication rate at day 5 with inhaled therapy | NR | Systemic antibiotics not described |
Abbreviations: MDR: multidrug-resistant; VAP: ventilator-associated pneumonia; NR: not reported; q12h: every 12 h; COS: colistin-only susceptible; q8h: every 8 h; BID: twice daily; ICU: intensive care unit; NP: nosocomial pneumonia; TID: three times daily; q6h: every 6 h; HAP: hospital-acquired pneumonia; QID: four times daily; AKI: acute kidney injury; CRAB: carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii; A Presented as means, means ± standard deviations, medians (interquartile ranges [underlined]), means (ranges), or (ranges) unless otherwise specified.; B As stated in methods; C Reported for IV/inhaled group; D As reported for IV therapy only. Inhaled therapy was continued until eradication.; E n = 10; F Presented as median (range). G As reported for IV colistin therapy only. All patients received inhaled colistin for at least 3 days or more than 50% of the duration of the treatment with IV colistin. H Inhaled colistin dose note reported. I The authors report the causality to colistin was uncertain due to co-administration of other neurotoxic agents (narcotics, sedatives, steroids).