| Literature DB >> 31412127 |
Chitra Punjabi1, Vivian Tien1, Lina Meng2, Stan Deresinski1, Marisa Holubar1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Using published data, we sought to compare outcomes in patients transitioned to either oral fluoroquinolones (FQ) or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) versus ß-lactams (BL's) after an initial intravenous (IV) course for gram-negative rod (GNR) bacteremia.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31412127 PMCID: PMC6785705 DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofz364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis ISSN: 2328-8957 Impact factor: 3.835
Figure 1.Search algorithm.
Summary of Included Studies
| Study | Study Design | Patient Characteristics | Patient (n) and PO Regimens | Source of Infection | Follow-up Period, d | Median (or Mean) Length of IV Therapy FQ/TMP-SMX vs BLs, if Reported | Median (or Mean) Length of Total Therapy FQ/TMP-SMX vs BLs, if Reported | 30- or 90-d All-Cause Mortality, Died/Total | Recurrent Infection | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FQ/TMP-SMX | BLs | FQ/TMP-SMX | BLs | ||||||||
| Kutob 2016 | Retrospective cohort | Mean age 63; 40% male; 55% white; 37% DM; 3% cirrhosis; 9.4% IC; mean Pitt score 1.5 | n = 362; FQ = 257; T/S = 28; BL 77 | UTI: 70.2% | 90 | 4.65 vs 4.8 | 13.8 vs 13.9 | (9/285) | (3/77) | 12/285 (5) | 7/77 (3) |
| Others: 29.8% | |||||||||||
| Sessa 2018 | Retrospective cohort, abstract | Mean age 70; 39% male; mean CCI 2.15; mean Pitt score 1.2 | n = 208; FQ = 49; T/S = 8; BL = 151 | UTI: 77.8% | 30 | (4.60 vs 4.67) | (13.98 vs 12.93) | 0/57 | 0/151 | 3/57 (1) | 14/151 (3) |
| IA: 16.3% | |||||||||||
| Others: 5.7% | |||||||||||
| Rieger 2018b | Retrospective cohort | Median age 64; 46% male; 49% white; 79% DM; 18% liver disease; 7% metastatic cancer; median CCI 6 | n = 114; FQ = 74; T/S = 10; BL = 30 | UTI: 100% | 30 | 4 | 14.4 vs 14 | 2/84 | 0/30 | 2/84 (2) | 1/30 (1) |
| Mercuro 2018 | Retrospective cohort | Mean age 70.8; 51% male; 43% DM; 5% cirrhosis; 5% transplant hx; excluded neutropenia; median CCI 3; median Pitt score 1 | n = 224; FQ = 140; BL = 84 | UTI: 70.85% | 30 | 3 | 14 | 1/140 | 1/84 | 3/140 (0) | 5/84 (2) |
| IA: 21% | |||||||||||
| Others: 6.95% | |||||||||||
| Fong 2018 | Retrospective cohort, abstract | Median age 70; 54% male; 65% white; 33.5% DM; 6.3% cirrhosis; 25% IC; median CCI 5; median Pitt score 2 | n = 173; FQ = 114; BL = 59 | UTI: 57% | 90 | 4 vs 5 | 16 vs 16 | (4/114) | (1/59) | 5/114 (1) | 4/59 (2) |
| IA: 22.5% | |||||||||||
| Others: 20.5% | |||||||||||
| Gumbleton 2018 | Retrospective cohort, abstract | Mean age 65.7; 33% male; mean Pitt score 1.4 | n = 205; FQ = 108; T/S = 11; BL = 86 | UTI: 80% | 30 | 3.6 vs 4.36 | 14.3 vs 13.6 | 1/119 | 2/86 | 0/119 (0) | 3/86 (1) |
| IA: 11% | |||||||||||
| Others: 9% | |||||||||||
| Tamma 2019 | Retrospective, propensity-matched cohort, multicenter study | Median age 59; 52% male; 49% white; 25% DM; 6% cirrhosis; 59% IC; median Pitt score 2 | n = 739; FQ = 518; T/S = 99; BL = 122 | UTI: 40.2% | 30 | 3 | 15 | 68/617 | 15/122 | (4)/617a | (0)/122a |
| IA: 20.1% | |||||||||||
| CLABSI: 18.4% | |||||||||||
| Others: 6.7% | |||||||||||
| Thurber 2019 | Retrospective cohort | Median age 73; 40% male; 93% white; 21% IC; median CCI 5 | n = 264; FQ = 229; T/S = 21; BL = 14 | UTI: 100% | 21 | 3 | 14 | 0/250 | 0/14 | (4)/250a | (0)/14a |
Abbreviations: BL, ß-lactams; BSI, bloodstream infection; CCI, Charlson Comorbidity Index; CLABSI, Central line associated blood stream infection; DM, Diabetes mellitus; FQ, fluoroquinolone; IA, intraabdominal; IC, immunocompromised; PO, oral; T/S or TMP-SMX, Trimethropim-Sulfamethoxazole; UTI, urinary tract infection.
aRecurrent bacteremias only recorded.
bAuthors provided their deidentified data for our review and analysis. As only UTI patients were included, patients de-escalated to moxifloxacin were removed from our analysis.
Dosing Regimens of Antibiotics
| Study | Antibiotic | Dose | Frequency, % of (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kutob (most common regimens reported) | Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (n = 30) | 875/125 mg q12h | 70 |
| 500/125 mg q8h | 30 | ||
| Amoxicillin (n = 12) | 500 mg q8h | 83 | |
| Cephalexin (n = 16) | 500 mg q6h | 56 | |
| Levofloxacin (n = 106) | 500 mg q24h | 48 | |
| 750 mg q24h | 33 | ||
| Ciprofloxacin (n = 151) | 500 mg q12h | 84 | |
| TMP-SMX (n = 28) | 800/160 mg q12h | 100 | |
| Mercuro (doses for normal renal function only) | Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (n = 25) | 875/125 mg q12h | 92 |
| 500/125 mg q12h | 4 | ||
| 500/125 mg q8h | 4 | ||
| Amoxicillin (n = 8) | 1000 mg q8h | 50 | |
| 500 mg q8h | 37.5 | ||
| 500 mg q12h | 12.5 | ||
| Cephalexin (n = 11) | 500 mg q6h | 82 | |
| 500 mg q8h | 9 | ||
| 500 mg q12h | 9 | ||
| Levofloxacin (n = 29) | 500 mg q24h | 13.7 | |
| 750 mg q24h | 82.7 | ||
| Ciprofloxacin (n = 56) | 500 mg q12h | 91 | |
| 750 mg q12h | 7.1 | ||
| Tamma | Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (n = 38) | 500–1000 mg q 8–12h | N.A. |
| Cephalexin (n = 16) | 500 mg q 6h | N.A. | |
| Cefpodoxime (n = 17) | 200–400 mg q12h | N.A. | |
| Ciprofloxacin (n = 337) | 500–750 mg q12h | N.A. | |
| Levofloxacin (n = 171) | 500–750 mg q24h | N.A. | |
| Moxifloxacin (n = 10) | 400 mg q24h | N.A. | |
| TMP-SMX (n = 99) | 160–320 mg q6–12h | N.A. | |
| Sessa | Subtherapeutic dosing: | No. (%) | |
| FQ/TMP-SMX | 2/57 (3.51) | ||
| ß-lactams | 45/151 (29.8) |
Abbreviations: FQ, fluoroquinolone; TMP-SMX, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
Figure 2.Odds ratio, all-cause mortality, ß-lactams vs fluoroquinolone/trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; FQ, fluoroquinolone; TMP-SMX, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
Figure 3.A, Odds ratio (OR), overall recurrence of infection, ß-lactams (BLs) vs fluoroquinolones (FQs). B, OR, recurrent bacteremia, BL vs FQ. Abbreviation: CI, confidence interval.