351. Epidemiology of adverse events and Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea during long-term antibiotic therapy for osteoarticular infections
- Author
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Maximilian Schindler, Pierre Hoffmeyer, Louis Bernard, Stéphane Emonet, Axel Gamulin, Wilson Belaieff, Guillaume Racloz, Daniel Pablo Lew, and Ilker Uçkay
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,Diarrhea ,Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prosthesis-Related Infections ,Adolescent ,Nausea ,medicine.drug_class ,Antibiotics ,Cohort Studies ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,ddc:616 ,Analysis of Variance ,Chi-Square Distribution ,ddc:617 ,business.industry ,Clostridioides difficile ,Hazard ratio ,Clostridium difficile ,Middle Aged ,Bone Diseases, Infectious ,Rash ,Surgery ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Metronidazole ,Infectious Diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Switzerland ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Objective Osteoarticular infections require several weeks of antibiotic therapy, but little is known about the epidemiology of adverse events (AE) including symptomatic Clostridium difficile -associated diarrhea during treatment in these patients. Methods Cohort study (1996–2011) at a tertiary hospital non-endemic for clostridial ribotype O27. Patients with previous C. difficile episodes and metronidazole treatment were excluded. Results A total of 393 episodes were identified. Median age of patients was 69 years; 122 were immune-suppressed. All patients received antibiotic treatment for a median of 8 weeks, including 2 weeks intravenously (range, 0–9 weeks). Oral rifampin (600 mg/d) was used in combination in 167 (42%) episodes. A relatively small number of episodes (115/393; 29%) were complicated by AE (diarrhea, nausea, cholestasis, gastric intolerance to rifampin, rash, and mycosis), of which 41 (36%) led to treatment modification. AE occurred mainly after a median of 21 days. Fourteen patients (14/393; 3.6%) developed symptomatic C. difficile diarrhea. By multivariate Cox regression analysis, total duration of antibiotic therapy, and intravenous administration were significantly associated with AE (all p C. difficile infection, rifampin (hazard ratio 0.21; 95% CI, 0.05–0.97) protected from diarrhea, but not gender or age. Hospital stay was significantly longer among patients with AE than patients without (median 78 vs. 42 d; p Conclusions AE were frequent and were observed in 29% of patients treated for osteoarticular infections and prolonged the hospital stay. In contrast, diarrhea due to C. difficile was rare, while oral rifampin might act protectively against it.
- Published
- 2013