News

Many patients with diabetic foot infections get unnecessary MRSA treatment


 

FROM PLOS ONE

References

Many patients with diabetic foot infections receive methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus antibiotics unnecessarily, according to Kelly Reveles, PharmD, and her associates.

Among the 318 patients with diabetic foot infections (DFIs) in the study, S. aureus was the most common pathogen, accounting for 146 cases. MRSA accounted for 47 of S. aureus cases, and 15% of overall cases. Although MRSA accounted for a relatively small number of cases, MRSA antibiotics were administered to 86% of all patients, resulting in 71% of all patients receiving the treatment unnecessarily.

©Balkonsky/Thinkstock

Independent risk factors for MRSA DFI were male sex and bone involvement. Other risk factors included previous MRSA infection, more severe infection, and a higher white cell count. The most common comorbidities of DFI were hypertension, dyslipidemia, and obesity.

“The improper use of antibiotics unnecessarily exposes the patient to potential complications of the therapy. Furthermore, the overuse of antibiotics drives antimicrobial resistance and is likely to increase the health care burden,” the investigators wrote.

Find the full study in PLoS One (doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0161658).

lfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Another 199 pregnant women with Zika
MDedge Internal Medicine
Treat bed bug bites with topical steroids
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA rule will pull many consumer antibacterial soaps from market
MDedge Internal Medicine
USPSTF: Screen for tuberculosis in those at greatest risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
Antibiotic susceptibility differs in transplant recipients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Another infant with Zika-related birth defect born in the United States
MDedge Internal Medicine
Fourth U.S. case of mcr-1–resistance gene reported
MDedge Internal Medicine
Zika’s not the only mosquito-borne virus to worry about
MDedge Internal Medicine
New ELISA better differentiates chronic, acute hepatitis E infection
MDedge Internal Medicine
WHO updates ranking of critically important antimicrobials
MDedge Internal Medicine