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Clinical management of severe infections caused by carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacteria: a worldwide cross-sectional survey addressing the use of antibiotic combinations

Authors :
Carrara, E
Savoldi, A
Piddock, LJ
Franceschi, F
Ellis, S
Sharland, M
John Brink, A
Harris, PN
Levy-Hara, G
Rohit, A
Tsioutis, C
Zayyad, H
Giske, C
Chiamenti, M
Bragantini, D
Righi, E
Gorska, A
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Optimal treatment of carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative (CR-GNB) infections is uncertain due to the lack of good-quality evidence and the limited effectiveness of available antibiotics. The aim of this survey was to investigate clinicians' prescribing strategies for treating CR-GNB infections worldwide. METHODS: A 36-items-questionnaire was developed addressing the following aspects of antibiotic prescribing: respondent's background, diagnostic and therapeutic availability, preferred antibiotic strategies and rationale for selecting combination therapy. Prescribers were recruited following the snowball-sampling approach, and a post-stratification correction with inverse proportional weights was used to adjust the sample's representativeness. RESULTS: 1012 respondents from 95 countries participated in the survey. Overall, 298 (30%) of respondents had local guidelines for treating CR-GNB at their facility and 702 (71%) had access to Infectious Diseases consultation, with significant discrepancies according to country economic status: 85% (390/502) in High-Income-Countries vs 59% (194/283) in Upper-Medium-Income-Countries and 30% (118/196) in Lower-Middle-Income-Countries/Lower-Income-Countries). Targeted regimens varied widely, ranging from 40 regimens for CR-Acinetobacter spp. to more than 100 regimens for CR-Enterobacteriaceae. Although the majority of respondents acknowledged the lack of evidence behind this choice, dual combination was the preferred treatment scheme and carbapenem-polymyxin was the most prescribed regimen, irrespective of pathogen and infection source. Respondents noticeably disagreed around the meaning of 'combination therapy' with 20% (150/783) indicating the simple addition of multiple compounds, 42% (321/783) requiring the presence of in vitro activity and 38% (290/783) of in vitro-synergism. CONCLUSIONS: Management of CR-GNB infections is far from being standardized. Strategic public health focussed randomised controlled trials are urgently required to inform evidence-based treatment guidelines.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14690691
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....1c7106962c97fa1572cd03b96be71248