학술논문

Evaluation of early antimicrobial therapy adaptation guided by the BetaLACTA® test: a case-control study
Document Type
article
Source
Critical Care, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2017)
Subject
Antimicrobial agent administration
Microbial susceptibility tests
Beta-lactam resistance
Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase
Intensive care unit
Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid
RC86-88.9
Language
English
ISSN
1364-8535
Abstract
Abstract Background Rapid diagnostic tests detecting microbial resistance are needed for limiting the duration of inappropriateness of empirical antimicrobial therapy (EAT) in intensive care unit patients, besides reducing the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics. We hypothesized that the betaLACTA® test (BLT) could lead to early increase in the adequacy of antimicrobial therapy. Methods This was a case-control study. Sixty-one patients with BLT-guided adaptation of EAT were prospectively included, and then matched with 61 “controls” having similar infection characteristics (community or hospital-acquired, and source of infection), in whom EAT was conventionally adapted to antibiogram results. Endpoints were to compare the proportion of appropriate (primary endpoint) and optimal (secondary endpoint) antimicrobial therapies with each of the two strategies, once microbiological sample culture results were available. Results Characteristics of patients, infections and EAT at inclusion were similar between groups. Nine early escalations of EAT occurred in the BLT-guided adaptation group, reaching 98% appropriateness vs. 77% in the conventional adaptation group (p