1. Longer than 2 hours to antibiotics is associated with doubling of mortality in a multinational community-acquired bacterial meningitis cohort.
- Author
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Eisen DP, Hamilton E, Bodilsen J, Køster-Rasmussen R, Stockdale AJ, Miner J, Nielsen H, Dzupova O, Sethi V, Copson RK, Harings M, and Adegboye OA
- Subjects
- Australia epidemiology, Community-Acquired Infections complications, Female, Humans, Male, Meningitis, Bacterial complications, Nervous System Diseases epidemiology, Nervous System Diseases etiology, Observational Studies as Topic, Propensity Score, Retrospective Studies, Sweden epidemiology, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, United Kingdom epidemiology, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Community-Acquired Infections drug therapy, Community-Acquired Infections mortality, Meningitis, Bacterial drug therapy, Meningitis, Bacterial mortality, Time-to-Treatment
- Abstract
To optimally define the association between time to effective antibiotic therapy and clinical outcomes in adult community-acquired bacterial meningitis. A systematic review of the literature describing the association between time to antibiotics and death or neurological impairment due to adult community-acquired bacterial meningitis was performed. A retrospective cohort, multivariable and propensity-score based analyses were performed using individual patient clinical data from Australian, Danish and United Kingdom studies. Heterogeneity of published observational study designs precluded meta-analysis of aggregate data (I
2 = 90.1%, 95% CI 71.9-98.3%). Individual patient data on 659 subjects were made available for analysis. Multivariable analysis was performed on 180-362 propensity-score matched data. The risk of death (adjusted odds ratio, aOR) associated with treatment after two hours was 2.29 (95% CI 1.28-4.09) and increased substantially thereafter. Similarly, time to antibiotics of greater than three hours was associated with an increase in the occurrence of neurological impairment (aOR 1.79, 95% CI 1.03-3.14). Among patients with community-acquired bacterial meningitis, odds of mortality increase markedly when antibiotics are given later than two hours after presentation to the hospital., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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