| Literature DB >> 34666432 |
Yun Jung Jung1, Eun Jin Kim2, Young Hwa Choi2.
Abstract
Aerosolized antibiotics are being increasingly used to treat respiratory infections, especially those caused by drug-resistant pathogens. Their use in the treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia in critically ill patients is especially significant. They are also used as an efficient alternative to overcome the issues caused by systemic administration of antibiotics, including the occurrence of drug-resistant strains, drug toxicity, and insufficient drug concentration at the target site. However, the rationale for the use of aerosolized antibiotics is limited owing to their insufficient efficacy and the potential for underestimated risks of developing side effects. Despite the lack of availability of high-quality evidence, the use of aerosolized antibiotics is considered as an attractive alternative treatment approach, especially in patients with multidrug-resistant pathogens. In this review, we have discussed the effectiveness and side effects of aerosolized antibiotics as well as the latest advancements in this field and usage in the Republic of Korea.Entities:
Keywords: Aerosolized antibiotics; Hospital-acquired pneumonia; Multidrug-resistant; Ventilator-associated pneumonia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34666432 PMCID: PMC8747925 DOI: 10.3904/kjim.2021.277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Intern Med ISSN: 1226-3303 Impact factor: 2.884
FDA-approved aerosolized antibiotics
| Drug | Indication | FDA-approved year [ | Dose/Frequency | Availability in the Republic of Korea |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tobramycin (TOBI®/Bethkis®) | CF | 1997/2012 | 300 mg twice a day | No |
| AZLI (Cayston®) | CF | 2010 | 75 mg three times a day | No |
| ALIS (Arikayce®) | MAC-LD | 2018 | 590 mg once a day | No |
FDA, U.S. Food and Drug Administration; CF, cystic fibrosis; AZLI, aztreonam lysine inhalation solution; ALIS, amikacin liposome inhalation suspension; MAC-LD, Mycobacterium avium complex lung disease.
Clinical studies on aerosolized antibiotics
| Study | Design | No. of patients/type of infection | Intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ioannidou et al. (2007) [ | Meta-analysis (5 RCTs) | 176/HAP | AS or endotracheally instilled aminoglycosides vs. placebo, with IV or IM antibiotics | High success rates with intervention; no difference in mortality, microbial eradication rate, and drug-related adverse event |
| Sole-Lleonart et al. (2017) [ | Meta-analysis (6 RCTs + 5 observational studies) | 826/VAP or VAT | AS aminoglycosides or colistin ± IV aminoglycosides or colistin vs. IV aminoglycosides or colistin, with IV antibiotics | High clinical cure rates with AS antibiotics in VAP with drug-resistant pathogens, less nephrotoxicity; no difference in mortality, MV duration; compromised MV in hypoxemic patients |
| Hassan et al. (2018) [ | Open label RCT | 133/Postcardiac surgery, HAP, or VAP | AS amikacin 400 mg BID vs. IV amikacin 20 mg/kg once daily, with IV piperacillin/tazobactam | High clinical cure rates with AS amikacin on day 7, shortened ICU stay and MV duration, less nephrotoxicity; no difference in mortality |
| Kollef et al. (2017) [ | Double-blind RCT | 143/VAP | AS amikacin 300 mg/fosfomycin 120 mg BID vs. placebo, with IV meropenem or imipenem | Few positive tracheal cultures on days 3 and 7 with AS amikacin/fosfomycin; no difference in CPIS change, mortality, and clinical relapse rates |
| Niederman et al. (2020) [ | Double-blind RCT | 725/Gram-negative pneumonia under MV | AS amikacin 400 mg BID vs. placebo, with IV antibiotics | No difference in survival until day 28–32, pneumonia-related mortality, duration of MV and ICU stay, and drug-related adverse events |
| Rattanaumpawan et al. (2010) [ | Open label RCT | 100/VAP | AS colistin (CBA 75 mg) BID vs. placebo, with IV antibiotics | High microbial eradication rate with AS colistin; no difference in clinical outcome overall |
| Abdellatif et al. (2016) [ | Single-blind RCT | 149/VAP | AS colistin 4 MIU TID vs. IV colistin LD 9 MIU + 4.5 MIU BID, with IV imipenem | Improvement in respiratory failure (PaO2/FiO2 ratio), shortened time to microbial eradication, early weaning from MV, less nephrotoxicity with AS colistin; no difference in clinical cure rates, length of stay, and 28-day mortality |
| Valachis et al. (2015) [ | Meta-analysis (7 observational cohort or case-control studies + 1 RCT) | 690/VAP | AS colistin + IV colistin vs. IV Colistin alone | Improvement in clinical response, microbial eradication rate, and infection-related mortality with AS + IV colistin; no difference in overall mortality |
RCT, randomized control trial; HAP, hospital-acquired pneumonia; AS, aerosolized; IV, intravenous; IM, intramuscular; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia; VAT, ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis; MV, mechanical ventilation; BID, twice daily; ICU, intensive care units; CPIS, clinical pulmonary infection score; CBA, colistin base activity; MIU, million international units; TID, three times daily; LD, loading dose.