Articles Tagged With: antibiotics
-
Shortages of Antimicrobial Agents
Shortages of antimicrobial drugs are frequent and represent a danger to patients and to public health.
-
Noninferiority of Seven vs. 14 Days of Antibiotic Therapy for Bloodstream Infections
In this multinational, noninferiority trial that included more than 3,600 hospitalized patients with bloodstream infections from various pathogens and infectious syndromes, seven days of antibiotic therapy was noninferior to 14 days with respect to death from any cause by 90 days. Patients were excluded if they had severe immunosuppression or foci requiring prolonged treatment, or if their blood cultures yielded Staphylococcus aureus or possible contaminants. Various secondary outcomes were similar between the two groups.
-
Uncomplicated Pediatric Appendicitis: Antibiotics or Appendectomy?
Some patients with acute uncomplicated appendicitis do well with initial antibiotic treatment and do not require surgical appendectomy. However, as with adults, approximately one-third of antibiotic-treated children eventually will require surgical removal of the appendix despite the initial short-term success of medical management.
-
Infectious Disease Updates
Clostridioides difficile: Reduced Susceptibility to Vancomycin? Antibiotics Reduce Culture Yield in Joint Infection
-
Procalcitonin-Guided Care Leads to Shorter Duration of Antibiotics in Sepsis Patients
In this multicenter, intervention-concealed, randomized clinical trial of 2,760 critically ill patients hospitalized with sepsis, the use of a daily procalcitonin-guided protocol resulted in shorter antibiotic duration as compared with standard care, without a significant difference in 28-day all-cause mortality. There was no significant difference in antibiotic duration between patients managed with a daily C-reactive protein-guided protocol and standard care, and the difference in all-cause mortality between these two groups was inconclusive.
-
Pink Eye: Do Antibiotics Matter?
Acute infectious conjunctivitis, commonly referred to as pink eye, is common in children and is caused by bacteria more often than by viruses. Nonetheless, neither the clinical course of uncomplicated cases nor the spread of infection to peers is significantly altered by treatment with topical antibiotics or by exclusion of infected children from daycare and school settings.
-
Outpatient CAP Treatment in Adults: Narrower Spectrum Therapy Is Better Tolerated
Examination of a large database led to the conclusion that treatment of community-acquired pneumonia in outpatients with narrower-spectrum agents (macrolides or doxycycline) was associated with similar clinical outcomes but with a lower incidence of adverse effects when compared to broader-spectrum therapy.
-
Noninferiority of Seven vs. 14 Days of Antibiotic Therapy for Bloodstream Infections
In this multinational, noninferiority trial that included more than 3,600 hospitalized patients with bloodstream infections from various pathogens and infectious syndromes, seven days of antibiotic therapy was noninferior to 14 days with respect to death from any cause by 90 days. Patients were excluded if they had severe immunosuppression or foci requiring prolonged treatment, or if their blood cultures yielded Staphylococcus aureus or possible contaminants. Various secondary outcomes were similar between the two groups.
-
Comparison of Postoperative Antibiotic Regimens for Complex Appendicitis
In a pragmatic, open-label, randomized trial conducted at 15 hospitals in the Netherlands, two days of postoperative intravenous antibiotics for complex appendicitis was found to be noninferior to five days in terms of infectious complications and mortality within 90 days.
-
Outpatient CAP Treatment in Adults: Narrower Spectrum Therapy Is Better Tolerated
Examination of a large database led to the conclusion that treatment of community-acquired pneumonia in outpatients with narrower-spectrum agents (macrolides or doxycycline) was associated with similar clinical outcomes but with a lower incidence of adverse effects when compared to broader-spectrum therapy.