| Literature DB >> 33209303 |
Benjamin Alan Pontefract1,2, Suzette Amy Rovelsky2, Karl Joseph Madaras-Kelly2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus can cause urinary tract infection. Linezolid possesses antimicrobial activity against vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus but has limited urinary excretion. Minimal data demonstrate efficacy of linezolid for treatment of urinary tract infections.Entities:
Keywords: Enterococcus; Infectious diseases; antibiotic resistance; linezolid; urinary tract infections
Year: 2020 PMID: 33209303 PMCID: PMC7645773 DOI: 10.1177/2050312120970743
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Figure 1.Flow diagram for identification of patients with UTI caused by VRE cohort.
CDW: corporate data warehouse; UTI: urinary tract infection; VA: veterans affairs; VRE: vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus.
Incomplete data refers to patients who did not have adequate data needed for identification within the electronic medical record. All timeframes refer to the date when the urine culture that grew VRE was collected.
Patient demographics.[a]
| Total cohort (N = 92) | Linezolid (N = 54) | Comparators (N = 38) | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 69 ± 12.5 | 68 ± 12.7 | 70 ± 12.2 | 0.45 |
| Male gender | 84 (91) | 48 (89) | 36 (95) | 0.46 |
| Catheter present | 77 (84) | 45 (83) | 32 (84) | 1.00 |
| Urinary pathology[ | 58 (63) | 35 (65) | 23 (61) | 0.83 |
| Urinary procedure in previous 30 days[ | 10 (11) | 8 (15) | 2 (5) | 0.19 |
| Malignancy | 43 (47) | 25 (46) | 18 (47) | 1.00 |
| Charlson Comorbidity Index | 8.7 ± 3.3 | 8.9 ± 3.1 | 8.3 ± 3.5 | 0.39 |
|
| 58 (63) | 39 (72) | 19 (50) | 0.237 |
|
| 25 (27) | 7 (13) | 18 (47) | 0.002 |
| Other | 2 (2) | 1 (2) | 1 (3) | 1.000 |
| Unspecified | 7 (8) | 7 (13) | 0 (0) | 0.168 |
| Location[ | ||||
| ICU | 21 (30) | 16 (35) | 5 (20) | 0.302 |
| Non-ICU | 50 (70) | 30 (65) | 20 (80) |
ICU: intensive care unit.
Data presented as n (%) or mean ± SD.
Urinary pathology included the presence of urinary stent, current urolithiasis, benign prostatic hyperplasia, urinary flow obstruction, prostate cancer, bladder cancer, or nephrology tubes.
Urinary procedures included urinary stent placement, urolithiasis management, nephrostomy tube placement, and transurethral resection of bladder tumor.
Location was not specified for 21 patients. These data were available for 71 patients in the total cohort. This included 46 patients in the linezolid group and 25 patients in the comparator group.
Odds ratio (95% confidence intervals) for 14-day clinical outcomes comparing linezolid with comparator antibiotics.
| Unadjusted outcomes | Unadjusted p values | Adjusted outcomes | Adjusted p values | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive VRE urine culture[ | 0.32 (0.06–1.85) | 0.22 | 0.36 (0.05–2.31) | 0.28 |
| Re-initiation of antibiotics with VRE activity[ | 1.82 (0.33–9.97) | 0.69 | 1.90 (0.34–10.63) | 0.46 |
| Mortality[ | 2.96 (0.32–27.59) | 0.40 | 2.96 (0.37–41.39) | 0.34 |
UTI: urinary tract infection; VRE: vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus.
Included mortality from day 4 of definitive treatment to 14 days after the end of definitive treatment.
Positive VRE urine culture covariates (univariate OR (95% CI)): 30-day history of urological procedure (9.25 (1.67–51.28)).
VRE UTI Retreatment Covariates (univariate OR (95% CI)): 30-day history of urological procedure (7.32 (1.41–37.95)).
Mortality covariates (univariate OR (95% CI)): length of definitive treatment (0.68 (0.48–0.96)).