Scientific Reports (Jan 2022)

Longer than 2 hours to antibiotics is associated with doubling of mortality in a multinational community-acquired bacterial meningitis cohort

  • Damon P. Eisen,
  • Elizabeth Hamilton,
  • Jacob Bodilsen,
  • Rasmus Køster-Rasmussen,
  • Alexander J. Stockdale,
  • James Miner,
  • Henrik Nielsen,
  • Olga Dzupova,
  • Varun Sethi,
  • Rachel K. Copson,
  • Miriam Harings,
  • Oyelola A. Adegboye

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-04349-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract To optimally define the association between time to effective antibiotic therapy and clinical outcomes in adult community-acquired bacterial meningitis. A systematic review of the literature describing the association between time to antibiotics and death or neurological impairment due to adult community-acquired bacterial meningitis was performed. A retrospective cohort, multivariable and propensity-score based analyses were performed using individual patient clinical data from Australian, Danish and United Kingdom studies. Heterogeneity of published observational study designs precluded meta-analysis of aggregate data (I2 = 90.1%, 95% CI 71.9–98.3%). Individual patient data on 659 subjects were made available for analysis. Multivariable analysis was performed on 180–362 propensity-score matched data. The risk of death (adjusted odds ratio, aOR) associated with treatment after two hours was 2.29 (95% CI 1.28–4.09) and increased substantially thereafter. Similarly, time to antibiotics of greater than three hours was associated with an increase in the occurrence of neurological impairment (aOR 1.79, 95% CI 1.03–3.14). Among patients with community-acquired bacterial meningitis, odds of mortality increase markedly when antibiotics are given later than two hours after presentation to the hospital.