| Literature DB >> 35474756 |
Yukiko Ezure1,2, Veronica Rico3, David L Paterson1,4, Lisa Hall2, Patrick N A Harris1,5, Alex Soriano3, Jason A Roberts1,6,7,8, Matteo Bassetti9, Matthew J Roberts1,10, Elda Righi11, Hugh Wright1,4.
Abstract
This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the clinical efficacy and safety of carbapenems for the treatment of complicated urinary tract infections (cUTIs), with the comparators being new antibiotics evaluated for this indication. We searched 13 electronic databases for published randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and completed and/or ongoing trials. The search terms were developed using the Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcomes, and Study framework. Pooled efficacy estimates of composite cure (clinical success and microbiological eradication) favored the new antibiotic groups, although this was not statistically significant (risk ratio [RR], 0.91; 95% CI, 0.79-1.04). A pooled estimate examining clinical response alone showed no difference between treatment arms (RR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.96-1.05), however, new antibiotic treatments were superior to carbapenems for microbiological response (RR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.79-0.91). New antibiotic treatments demonstrated a superior microbiological response compared with carbapenems in clinical trials of cUTI, despite an absence of carbapenem resistance. However, it is noteworthy that the clinical response and safety profile of new antibiotics were not different from those of carbapenems.Entities:
Keywords: carbapenem; complicated urinary tract infections; efficacy and safety; new antibiotics; systematic review and meta-analysis
Year: 2020 PMID: 35474756 PMCID: PMC9031024 DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaa480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis ISSN: 2328-8957 Impact factor: 4.423
Figure 1.Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) diagram of assessed and included studies. Abbreviation: RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Characteristics of Included RCTs
| Author/Year | Study Design, Period | No. (RPa/SPb) | Study Population | Population Characteristics | Drug Regimen | Oral Treatment | Duration of IV, d | Outcomes | Baseline Uropathogen | Subgroup Populations | End Point (TOCc) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Age, y | Gender (F vs M), % | Carbapenem | New Antibiotics | ||||||||||
| Vazquez, 2012 [ | MC, MI, DB, RCT, June 2008– May 2018 | 137/135 | Ages 18–90 cUTI or APN | 48.2 ± 18.4/ 46.4 ± 18.2 | 73.1 vs 26.9/75.0 vs 25.0 | Imipenem-cilastatin: 500 mg IVd 30-min infusion every 6 h | Ceftazidime- avibactam (ceftazidime: 500 mg plus avibactam: 125 mg) IV 30-min infusion every 8 h | Ciprofloxacin 500 mg or alternative oral therapy | 6/5 | CR,e MR,f CC,g AEs |
| CE, ME, MITT | 12–23 |
| NCT00690378 | |||||||||||||
| Carmeli, 2016 [ | MC, MI, OL, RCT, Jan 2013– Aug 2014 | 306/305 | Ages 18–90 with cUTI or (cIAI: stratified) | 61.3 ± 15.3/ 64.3 ± 14.6 | 46.0 vs 54.0/44.4 vs 55.6 | BATh (97% carbapenem)i | Ceftazidime- avibactam (ceftazidime: 2 g plus avibactam: 500 mg) IV 2-h infusion every 8 hj | 10/10 | CR, MR, AEs |
| mMITT | 12–31 | |
| NCT01644643 | |||||||||||||
| Wagenlehner, 2016 [ | MC, MI, DB, RCT, Oct 2012– Aug 2014 | 1033/1020 | Ages 18–90 with cUTI or APN | 53.3 ± 18.6/ 51.4 ± 20.2 | 70.1 vs 29.9/68.3 vs 31.7 | Doripenem: 500 mg IV every 8 h | Ceftazidime- avibactam (ceftazidime: 2 g plus avibactam: 500 mg) IV every 8 h | Ciprofloxacin (500 mg every 12 h) or sulfamethoxazole- trimethoprim (800 mg/160 mg every 12 h) | 8/7 | CR, MR, CC, AEs |
| mMITT | 21–25 |
| Portsmouth, 2018 [ | MC, MI, DB, RCT, Feb 2015– Aug 2016 | 452/448 | Patients aged ≥18 y with cUTI or PN | 61.3 ± 18.48/ 62.3 ± 16.1 | 60 vs 40/53 vs 47 | Imipenem-cilastatin: 1 g IV every 8 h (doses of 3 g per day were permitted for those with | Cefiderocol: 2 g IV every 8 h | 9/9 | CR, MR, CC, AEs |
| mMITT | 14–23 | |
| NCT02321800 | |||||||||||||
| Wagenlehner, 2019 [ | MC, MI, DB, RCT, Jan–Sep 2016 | 609/604 | Patients aged ≥18 y with cUTI/APN | 60.0 ± 17.9/ 58.8 ± 18.0 | 49.2 vs 50.8/55.9 vs 44.1 | Meropenem: 1 g IV every 8 h | Plazomicin: 15 mg per kg | 9.2/8.9 | CR, MR, CC, AEs |
| mMITT | 15–19 | |
| NCT02486627 | |||||||||||||
| IGNITE 3, NCT03032510 | MC, MI, DB, RCT, Jan 2017– Apr 2018 | 1205 participants (randomized 1:1) | Ertapenem: 1 g every 24 h | Eravacycline: 1.5 mg/kg every 24 h | Not provided | CC | Not provided | mMITT | 14–17 |
Abbreviations: AE, adverse event; APN, acute pyelonephritis; CC, clinical cure; CE, clinically evaluable; cIAI, complicated intra-abdominal infection; CR, clinical response; cUTI, complicated urinary tract infection; DB, double-blind; IV, intravenous; MC, multicenter; MI, multi-international; MITT, modified intention-to-treat population; mMITT, microbiologically modified intention-to-treat population; MR, microbiological response; PN, pyelonephritis; RCT, randomized controlled trial; TOC, test of cure.
aRandomized population (all patients who were randomly allocated to treatment groups).
bSafety population (all patients who received at least 1 dose of IV).
cTreatment of cure visit: in ME population (population characteristics: carbapenem group vs new antibiotic group); mean age ± SD.
dIntravenous; duration of IV: median days of IV treatment (carbapenem group vs new antibiotics group).
eClinical response (clinical cure, complete resolution of clinical signs and symptoms of cUTI).
fMicrobiological response (microbiological eradication, reduction of the urine pathogen to <104 colony-forming units/mL).
gComposite cure (favorable microbiological and clinical response).
hBest available therapy [22].
iDoripenem (11), ertapenem (1), imipenem; 1.5–4.0 g (76), meropenem; 1.5–3.0 g (57), colistin + imipenem (1).
jDose modification for patients with renal impairment was applied.
Figure 2.Risk of bias summary. Ratings were based on the Cochrane guideline. Red circles, green circles, and yellow circles indicated high risk, low risk, and unclear risk, respectively.
Figure 3.Forest plot of the meta-analysis for effects of new antibiotic treatments vs carbapenem treatments for patients with complicated urinary tract infection at test of cure visit: (A) composite cure in the microbiologically modified intent-to-treat population (mMITT) or modified intent-to-treat population (MITT); (B) clinical response in the mMITT or clinically evaluable population; (C) microbiological response in the MITT or mMITT population. I2 shows proportion of inconsistency. Abbreviation: RR, risk ratio.
Figure 4.Forest plot of the meta-analysis for safety outcome of new antibiotic treatments vs carbapenem treatments for patients with complicated urinary tract infections: (A) adverse events in the safety population; (B) serious adverse events in the safety population. I2 shows proportion of inconsistency. Abbreviation: RR, risk ratio.
Figure 5.Meta-funnel plots comparing carbapenem and new antibiotics for each outcome: (a) composite cure, (b) clinical response, (c) microbiological response. The vertical line corresponds to the summary log(RR) as estimated from the random effects model. Red regression lines with SE regression on effect size are embedded. Abbreviation: RR, risk ratio.