| Literature DB >> 31560686 |
Inger van Heijl1,2, Valentijn A Schweitzer2, C H Edwin Boel3, Jan Jelrik Oosterheert4, Susanne M Huijts5, Wendelien Dorigo-Zetsma6, Paul D van der Linden1, Marc J M Bonten2,3, Cornelis H van Werkhoven2.
Abstract
Observational studies have demonstrated that de-escalation of antimicrobial therapy is independently associated with lower mortality. This most probably results from confounding by indication. Reaching clinical stability is associated with the decision to de-escalate and with survival. However, studies rarely adjust for this confounder. We quantified the potential confounding effect of clinical stability on the estimated impact of de-escalation on mortality in patients with community-acquired pneumonia. Data were used from the Community-Acquired Pneumonia immunization Trial in Adults (CAPiTA). The primary outcome was 30-day mortality. We performed Cox proportional-hazards regression with de-escalation as time-dependent variable and adjusted for baseline characteristics using propensity scores. The potential impact of unmeasured confounding was quantified through simulating a variable representing clinical stability on day three, using data on prevalence and associations with mortality from the literature. Of 1,536 included patients, 257 (16.7%) were de-escalated, 123 (8.0%) were escalated and in 1156 (75.3%) the antibiotic spectrum remained unchanged. Crude 30-day mortality was 3.5% (9/257) and 10.9% (107/986) in the de-escalation and continuation groups, respectively. The adjusted hazard ratio of de-escalation for 30-day mortality (compared to patients with unchanged coverage), without adjustment for clinical stability, was 0.39 (95%CI: 0.19-0.79). If 90% to 100% of de-escalated patients were clinically stable on day three, the fully adjusted hazard ratio would be 0.56 (95%CI: 0.27-1.12) to 1.04 (95%CI: 0.49-2.23), respectively. The simulated confounder was substantially stronger than any of the baseline confounders in our dataset. Quantification of effects of de-escalation on patient outcomes without proper adjustment for clinical stability results in strong negative bias. This study suggests the effect of de-escalation on mortality needs further well-designed prospective research to determine effect size more accurately.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31560686 PMCID: PMC6764693 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Antibiotic ranking.
| Rank 1 | Rank 2 | Rank 3 |
|---|---|---|
| Penicillin | 1st generation cephalosporins | 3d generation cephalosporins |
| Amoxicillin | 2nd generation cephalosporins | 4th generation cephalosporins |
| Tetracyclines | Co-amoxi-clav | Fluoroquinolones |
| Co-trimoxazole | Aminoglycosides | |
| Clindamycine | Piperacillin/tazobactam | |
| Macrolides | Carbapenems | |
| Vancomycin |
Fig 1Proportional hazards test for de-escalation.
The figure shows that the hazard ratio for de-escalation is not constant over time (i.e. proportion hazards assumption violated): the association between de-escalation and mortality is present within approx. 20-days after admission but is around zero afterwards.
Fig 2Patient selection.
Fig 3Alluvial-diagram of adjustment of empirical therapy.
Rank-1 = narrow-spectrum- antibiotics, rank-2 = broad-spectrum-antibiotics, rank-3 = extended-spectrum-antibiotics. Continued regimen is a straight line, de-escalation is a falling line, escalation is a rising line.
Baseline characteristics.
| Total cohort | De-escalation | No de-escalation (rank2-3) | No de-escalation (rank 1) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients (N, %) | 1536 (100) | 257 (16.7) | 1068 (69.5) | 211 (13.7) |
| Age (y, median, range) | 77 (65–100) | 77 (66–95) | 77 (65–99) | 78 (66–100) |
| Male gender (n, %) | 1093 (71.2) | 189 (73.5) | 768 (71.9) | 136 (64.5) |
| Smoker (n, %) | 194 (12.6) | 21 (8.2) | 148 (13.9) | 25 (11.8) |
| Co-morbidities (n, %) | ||||
| Chronic pulmonary disease | 849 (55.3) | 131 (51.0) | 608 (56.9) | 110 (52.1) |
| Chronic cardiovascular disease | 650 (42.3) | 123 (47.9) | 446 (41.8) | 81 (38.4) |
| Chronic renal disease | 11 (0.7) | 3 (1.2) | 5 (0.5) | 3 (1.4) |
| Chronic liver disease | 17 (1.1) | 5 (1.9) | 8 (0.7) | 5 (1.9) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 322 (21.0) | 53 (20.6) | 215 (20.1) | 54 (20.6) |
| PSI score (median, IQR) | 99 (82–117) | 103 (84–121) | 99 (82–118) | 92 (80–111) |
| Antibiotic use before admission (n, %) | 493 (32.1) | 84 (32.7) | 365 (34.2) | 44 (20.9) |
| Pathogen identified (n, %) | 469 (30.5) | 107 (41.6) | 303 (28.4) | 59 (28.0) |
| Day of admission (n, %) | ||||
| Weekend | 613 (39.9) | 71 (27.6) | 263 (24.6) | 59 (28.0) |
| Empirical rank on day 1 (n, %) | ||||
| Rank 1 | 211 (13.7) | NA | NA | 211 (100) |
| Rank 2 | 624 (40.6) | 42 (16.3) | 582 (54.5) | NA |
| Rank 3 | 701 (45.6) | 215 (83.7) | 486 (45.5) | NA |
Patients with a continued regimen and patients with an escalation.
Fig 4Effect of simulated confounder (clinical stability at 72 hours) on 30-day mortality.
The line reflects the Hazard Ratios for 30-day mortality (based on Cox proportional hazard regression analysis adjusted with propensity scores) with 95% Confidence Interval (shaded area) for different prevalence’s of clinical stability in patients with and without de-escalation (horizontal axis). At the left side the weighted average of the two proportions is fixed at 80%, which reflects the adjusted Hazard Ratio without adjustment for clinical stability. The dashed line represents a HR of 1. The HR rises from 0.39 to 1.04 when the prevalence of clinical stability increases to 100% in the de-escalated group. From a prevalence of clinical stability of 87% and above in the de-escalated group the upper limit of the 95% confidence interval included 1. For example a prevalence of 90% in de-escalated results in an adjusted HR of 0.56 (95% CI: 0.27–1.12) and a prevalence of 100% results in a HR of 1.04 (95% CI: 0.49–2.23).
Strength of known and simulated confounders to the crude HR for 30-day mortality.
| Confounder | % change of crude HR |
|---|---|
| Smoking | + 1.5 |
| Renal disease | + 1.7 |
| Respiratory rate | - 1.9 |
| Nursing home resident | + 2.0 |
| Congestive heart failure | - 2.2 |
| Liver disease | - 2.3 |
| Heart rate | - 2.4 |
| pH | - 2.8 |
| Propensity score | - 3.9 |
| Partial pressure of oxygen | - 4.2 |
| Blood urea nitrogen | - 6.5 |
| Neoplastic disease | + 7.4 |
| Rank on day 1 | - 11.4 |
| With prevalence in de-escalated group of 90% | + 37.4 |
| With prevalence in de-escalated group of 100% | + 157.8 |
Variables with a change less than 1.5%: diabetes mellitus, sodium, systolic blood pressure, hematocrit, cerebrovascular disease, antibiotic use before admission, day of admission, glucose, chronic pulmonary disease, pleural effusion, altered mental status, age, culture results, season of admission, temperature and gender.