Antibiotics (Jun 2021)

Prolonged Infusion of β-Lactams Decreases Mortality in Patients with Septic Shock: A Retrospective before-and-after Study

  • Daniel Christoph Richter,
  • Maximilian Dietrich,
  • Lazar Detelinov Lalev,
  • Felix C. F. Schmitt,
  • Mascha Onida Fiedler,
  • Thomas Bruckner,
  • Dominic Stoerzinger,
  • Ute Chiriac,
  • Sabrina Klein,
  • Thilo Hackert,
  • Thorsten Brenner,
  • Alexander Brinkmann,
  • Markus A. Weigand

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10060687
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. 687

Abstract

Read online

Septic shock substantially alters the pharmacokinetic properties of β-lactams with a subsequently high risk of insufficiently low serum concentrations and treatment failure. Considering their pharmacokinetic (PK)/pharmacodynamic (PD) index, prolonged infusions (PI) of β-lactams extend the time that the unbound fraction of the drug remains above the minimal inhibitory concentration MIC (ft >MIC) and may improve patient survival. The present study is a monocentric, retrospective before-and-after analysis of septic shock patients treated with β-lactams. Patients of the years 2015–2017 received intermittent bolus application whereas patients of 2017–2020 received PI of β-lactams. The primary outcome was mortality at day 30 and 90 after diagnosis of septic shock. Mortality rates in the PI group were significantly lower on day 30 (PI: 41%, n = 119/290 vs. IB: 54.8%, n = 68/114; p = 0.0097) and day 90 (PI: 47.9%, n = 139/290 vs. IB: 62.9%, n = 78/124; p = 0.005). After propensity-score matching, 30- and 90-day mortality remained lower for the PI group (−10%, p = 0.14). PI was further associated with a reduction in the duration of invasive ventilation and a stronger decrease in SOFA scores within a 14 day-observation period. PI of β-lactams was associated with a significant reduction of mortality in patients with septic shock and may have beneficial effects on invasive ventilation and recovery from sepsis-related organ failure.

Keywords