Frontiers in Medicine (Feb 2023)

Impact of reduced antibiotic treatment duration on antimicrobial resistance in critically ill patients in the randomized controlled SAPS-trial

  • Arezoo Shajiei,
  • Arezoo Shajiei,
  • Matthijs S. Berends,
  • Matthijs S. Berends,
  • Christian F. Luz,
  • Jos A. van Oers,
  • Hermie J. M. Harmsen,
  • Piet Vos,
  • Rob Klont,
  • Bert G. Loef,
  • Auke C. Reidinga,
  • Laura Bormans-Russell,
  • Kitty Linsen,
  • Tom Dormans,
  • Martine Otten,
  • Akke van der Bij,
  • Albertus Beishuizen,
  • Dylan W. de Lange,
  • Evelien de Jong,
  • Evelien de Jong,
  • Maarten W. Nijsten

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1080007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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BackgroundIn the previously reported SAPS trial (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01139489), procalcitonin-guidance safely reduced the duration of antibiotic treatment in critically ill patients. We assessed the impact of shorter antibiotic treatment on antimicrobial resistance development in SAPS patients.Materials and methodsCultures were assessed for the presence of multi-drug resistant (MDR) or highly resistant organisms (HRMO) and compared between PCT-guided and control patients. Baseline isolates from 30 days before to 5 days after randomization were compared with those from 5 to 30 days post-randomization. The primary endpoint was the incidence of new MDR/HRMO positive patients.ResultsIn total, 8,113 cultures with 96,515 antibiotic test results were evaluated for 439 and 482 patients randomized to the PCT and control groups, respectively. Disease severity at admission was similar for both groups. Median (IQR) durations of the first course of antibiotics were 6 days (4–10) and 7 days (5–11), respectively (p = 0.0001). Antibiotic-free days were 7 days (IQR 0–14) and 6 days (0–13; p = 0.05). Of all isolates assessed, 13% were MDR/HRMO positive and at baseline 186 (20%) patients were MDR/HMRO-positive. The incidence of new MDR/HRMO was 39 (8.9%) and 45 (9.3%) in PCT and control patients, respectively (p = 0.82). The time courses for MDR/HRMO development were also similar for both groups (p = 0.33).ConclusionsIn the 921 randomized patients studied, the small but statistically significant reduction in antibiotic treatment in the PCT-group did not translate into a detectable change in antimicrobial resistance. Studies with larger differences in antibiotic treatment duration, larger study populations or populations with higher MDR/HRMO incidences might detect such differences.

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