Conference Coverage

For Gram-negative bacteremias, 7 days of antibiotics is enough


 

REPORTING FROM ECCMID 2018

The primary outcome was a composite 90-day endpoint of all-cause mortality, clinical failure (relapse, new local complications, or distant complications), and readmission or hospital stay longer than 14 days. There were a number of secondary outcomes, including new infection, emergence of antibiotic resistance, total hospital and total antibiotic days, time to return to baseline activity, and adverse events.

The cohort was a mean of 71 years old. About 60% were functionally independent, and the mean Charlson comorbidity score was 2. Most of the infections (90%) were nosocomial. The urinary tract was the largest source of infection (69%). Other sources were abdominal, respiratory, central venous catheter, and skin or soft tissue.

Escherichia coli was the most common infective organism (62%), followed by Klebsiella species and Enterobacteriaceae. A small number of patients had Acinetobacter and Pseudomonas infections.

In the intent-to-treat analysis, the primary composite outcome of all-cause mortality or extended hospital stay occurred in 46% of the 7-day group and 50% of the 14-day group – not significantly different. The results were nearly identical in the per-protocol analysis (46% vs. 49.6%).

Pages

Recommended Reading

Antibiotic choice for acute otitis media 2018
MDedge Family Medicine
Drug combo indicated for bacterial pneumonia
MDedge Family Medicine
Reported penicillin allergies hike inpatient costs
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA warns against clarithromycin use in patients with heart disease
MDedge Family Medicine
QI initiative reduces antibiotic use in chorioamnionitis-exposed newborns
MDedge Family Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Antibiotic resistance leads to ‘nightmare’ bacteria
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA advisory committee votes to recommend first once-daily aminoglycoside antibiotic
MDedge Family Medicine
Don’t shorten therapy for older, sicker cellulitis patients
MDedge Family Medicine
ESBL-resistant bacteria spread in hospital despite strict contact precautions
MDedge Family Medicine
Three days of beta-lactam beat clinically stable CAP
MDedge Family Medicine