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Seven Versus 14 Days of Antibiotic Therapy for Uncomplicated Gram-negative Bacteremia: A Noninferiority Randomized Controlled Trial

Authors :
Fidi Koppel
Barak Pertzov
Anat Stern
Erica Franceschini
Cristina Mussini
Antonella Santoro
Danny Alon
Hiba Zayyad
Mical Paul
Noa Eliakim-Raz
Nesrin Ghanem-Zoubi
Tanya Babich
Roni Bitterman
Adi Turjeman
Yonatan Edel
Dafna Yahav
Claudia Venturelli
Tali Steinmetz
Elad Goldberg
Elias Maroun
Ami Neuberger
Yaakov Dickstein
Jihad Bishara
Leonard Leibovici
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases. 69:1091-1098
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2018.

Abstract

BackgroundGram-negative bacteremia is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in hospitalized patients. Data to guide the duration of antibiotic therapy are limited.MethodsThis was a randomized, multicenter, open-label, noninferiority trial. Inpatients with gram-negative bacteremia, who were afebrile and hemodynamically stable for at least 48 hours, were randomized to receive 7 days (intervention) or 14 days (control) of covering antibiotic therapy. Patients with uncontrolled focus of infection were excluded. The primary outcome at 90 days was a composite of all-cause mortality; relapse, suppurative, or distant complications; and readmission or extended hospitalization (>14 days). The noninferiority margin was set at 10%.ResultsWe included 604 patients (306 intervention, 298 control) between January 2013 and August 2017 in 3 centers in Israel and Italy. The source of the infection was urinary in 411 of 604 patients (68%); causative pathogens were mainly Enterobacteriaceae (543/604 [90%]). A 7-day difference in the median duration of covering antibiotics was achieved. The primary outcome occurred in 140 of 306 patients (45.8%) in the 7-day group vs 144 of 298 (48.3%) in the 14-day group (risk difference, –2.6% [95% confidence interval, –10.5% to 5.3%]). No significant differences were observed in all other outcomes and adverse events, except for a shorter time to return to baseline functional status in the short-course therapy arm.ConclusionsIn patients hospitalized with gram-negative bacteremia achieving clinical stability before day 7, an antibiotic course of 7 days was noninferior to 14 days. Reducing antibiotic treatment for uncomplicated gram-negative bacteremia to 7 days is an important antibiotic stewardship intervention.Clinical Trials RegistrationNCT01737320.

Details

ISSN :
15376591 and 10584838
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6f79fac8c82153c0064ae4db560e127f