| Literature DB >> 35326838 |
Yazed Saleh Alsowaida1,2,3, Gregorio Benitez2, Khalid Bin Saleh4, Thamer A Almangour5, Fadi Shehadeh1,2,6, Eleftherios Mylonakis1,2.
Abstract
(1) Background: Ceftriaxone is a potential alternative for the treatment of methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) bloodstream infections (BSIs) in acute care and outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) settings. We evaluated the effectiveness and safety of ceftriaxone for the treatment of MSSA BSIs. (2) Method: We searched PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library from their inception to October 30th 2021. Our outcomes included clinical cure, microbiological cure, 30- and 90-day mortality, 90-day hospital readmission, and adverse drug reactions (ADRs). We compared ceftriaxone against standard of care (SOC) therapy. We used the random-effects model for the meta-analysis, and our estimated effects were reported as odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CI). (3)Entities:
Keywords: MSSA; bacteremia; bloodstream infection; ceftriaxone; methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus; outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35326838 PMCID: PMC8944781 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11030375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Flow diagram for Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA).
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Author | Region and Date of the Study | Age Distribution (Years) | Treatment Setting and Sample Size (N) | Suspected Sources of MSSA BSIs ¥ | Ceftriaxone Regimens | SOC Regimens | NOS * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paul et al. (2011) [ | Israel, 1988–1994 and 1999–2007 | Mean = 69 (SD: 16.8) | Rabin Medical Center, (N = 489) | Unknown = 147 (27.2%), SSTIs = 83 (15.3%), CRIs = 63 (11.6%), RTIs = 54 (10%), SSIs = 49 (9.1%), other endovascular infections = 41 (7.6%), infective endocarditis = 25 (6.5%), and OAIs = 27 (5%) | Ceftriaxone and cefotaxime (ceftriaxone = 176 and cefotaxime = 18) ± | Cloxacillin or cefazolin | 9 |
| Patel et al. (2014) [ | U.S., January 2000–September 2009 | Ceftriaxone: mean = 63 (SD: 12.6) and SOC: mean = 68 (SD: 12.5) | Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital, (N = 93) | Unknown = 22 (23.6%), OAIs = 22 (23.6%), CRIs = 20 (21.5%), SSTIs = 15 (16.1%), infective endocarditis = 8 (8.6%), UTIs = 4 (4.3%), and RTIs = 2 (2.1%) | Ceftriaxone 2g Q 24 hr for 14 days for uncomplicated BSIs, and 28 days for complicated BSIs ¶ | Nafcillin or cefazolin for 14 days for uncomplicated BSIs, and 28 days for complicated BSIs §¶ | 9 |
| Carr et al. (2018) [ | U.S., January 2009–August 2014 | Ceftriaxone: mean = 64 (SD: 13.6) and SOC: mean = 63 (SD: 10.7) | Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of VA Medical Center, (N = 71) | OAIs = 28 (39.4%), endovascular infections = 17 (23.9%), SSTIs = 14 (19.7%), unknown = 9 (12.6%), infective endocarditis = 7 (9.9%), and UTIs = 3 (4.2%) | Ceftriaxone for 14 days ¶ | Cefazolin for 14 days ¶ | 8 |
| Hamad et al. (2020) [ | U.S., December 1, 2014–April 30, 2019 | Median = 59.6 (IQR: 47.8–70) | Discharged from Barnes-Jewish Hospital on OPAT, (N = 243) | Infective endocarditis = 83 (34.2%), CRIs = 70 (28.8%), OAIs = 68 (28%), unknown = 40 (16.5%), SSTIs = 33 (13.6%), prosthetic material infections = 26 (10.7%), SSIs = 16 (6.6%), and CNS = 13 (5.4%) | Ceftriaxone 2–4 g Q 24 hr for at least 7 days | Oxacillin 2g Q 4 hr or cefazolin 2g Q 8 hr for at least 7 days | 9 |
| Barber et al. (2021) [ | U.S., February 1, 2015–January 21, 2016 | Ceftriaxone: median = 43.5 (IQR: 35.2–57.5) and SOC: median = 45 (IQR: 36–55) | University of Mississippi Medical Center, (N = 43) | OAIs = 11 (25.6%), CRIs = 9 (20.9%), SSTIs = 7 (16.3%), unknown = 4 (9.3%), RTIs = 3 (7%), SSIs = 2 (4.7%), CNS = 1 (2.3%), and infective endocarditis = 1 (2.3%) | Ceftriaxone for at least 2 days ¶ | Nafcillin, oxacillin, or cefazolin for at least 2 days | 8 |
| Snawerdt et al. (2019) [ | U.S., February 2016–February 2018 | NA | Multi-centers, (N = 222, 107 patients with BSIs) | NA | Ceftriaxone ¶ | Cefazolin or nafcillin ¶ | 7 |
| Diamante et al. (2014) [ | U.S., January 2011–December 2013 | NA | Parkland Hospital OPAT clinic, (N = 46) | OAIs = 26 (56%), SSTIs = 7 (15%), CRIs = 7 | Ceftriaxone ¶ | Cefazolin ¶ | 7 |
| Hamad et al. (2021) [ | U.S., 2010–2018 | NA | Barnes-Jewish Hospital OPAT, (N = 1895) | SSTIs = 757 (40%), OAIs = 745 (39.3%), SSIs = 558 (29.4%), RTIs = 356 (18.8%), infective endocarditis = 276 (14.6%), CNS = 200 (10.6%), device related infections = 192 (10.1%), and CRIs = 175 (9.2%) | Ceftriaxone ¶ | Cefazolin or oxacillin ¶ | 9 |
| Wynn et al. (2005) [ | U.S., 1996–August 2001 | NA | OPAT registry, (N = 1252; 54 patients with BSIs) | NA | Ceftriaxone 1–6 g/day ¶ | Cefazolin 1.5–12 g/day, oxacillin 2–48 g/day, or nafcillin 0.8–24 g/day €¶ | 7 |
| Falsetta et al. (2017) [ | U.S., January 2012–September 2016 | NA | Acute care, (N = 51) | NA | Ceftriaxone for at least 14 days ¶ | Cefazolin or nafcillin for at least 14 days ¶ | 7 |
| Mohamed et al. (2020) [ | U.S. | Ceftriaxone: mean = 57.4 (SD: 16.8) and SOC: mean = 61 (SD: 15.9) | Saint Luke’s Health System, (N = 248) | Unknown = 75 (30.2%), OAIs = 53 (21.4%), SSTIs = 51 (20.6%), RTIs = 21 (8.5%), device related infections = 11 (4.4%), CNS = 11 (4.4%), infective endocarditis = 9 (3.6%), and UTIs = 4 (1.6%) | Ceftriaxone ¶ | Cefazolin ¶ | 7 |
| Bhavan et al. (2018) [ | U.S. | NA | Parkland Hospital OPAT clinic, (N = 258, 135 patients with BSIs) | NA | Ceftriaxone ¶ | Cefazolin ¶ | 5 |
Abbreviations: BSIs: bloodstream infections, CNS: central nervous system, CRIs: catheter-related infections, g: gram, hr: hour, IQR: interquartile range, NA: not available, No.: number, NOS: Newcastle Ottawa scale, OAIs: osteoarticular infections, OPAT: outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy, Q: every, RTIs: respiratory tract infections, SD: standard deviation, SSTIs: skin and soft tissue infections, SSIs: surgical site infections, UTIs: urinary tract infections, VA: Veterans Affairs, ¥: some patients have multiple suspected sources of BSIs, *: score out of 9 (1–3 low quality, 4–6 medium quality, 7–9 high quality), and ¶: complete regimen information was not reported, ±: we included this study because cefotaxime is similar to ceftriaxone in the microbiological spectrum and only comprise 9.2% of the ceftriaxone group, §: the SOC arm only included nafcillin and cefazolin and we excluded vancomycin, €: the SOC arm only included oxacillin, nafcillin, and cefazolin. Data on other treatments such as vancomycin and clindamycin were excluded.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of clinical cure (A) and microbiological cure (B).
Figure 3Meta-analysis of 30-day mortality (A) and 90-day mortality (B).
Figure 4Meta-analysis of 90-day hospital readmission (A) and ADRs (B).