Comparison of piperacillin/tazobactam and imipenem/cilastatin, both in combination with tobramycin, administered every 6h for treatment of nosocomial pneumonia.

Autor: Joshi, Manjari, Metzler, Michael, McCarthy, Mary, Olvey, Stephen, Kassira, Wedad, Cooper, Angel
Zdroj: Respiratory Medicine; Sep2006, Vol. 100 Issue 9, p1554-1565, 12p
Abstrakt: Summary: This randomized, double-blind, multicenter study compared the efficacy and safety of piperacillin/tazobactam (P/T) and imipenem/cilastatin (IMP), both in combination with an aminoglycoside, in hospitalized patients with acute nosocomial pneumonia (NP). Patients with acute NP, defined as pneumonia with symptoms ⩾48h after admission or ⩽7 days after hospital discharge, received infusions of 4g/500mg P/T or 500mg/500mg IMP every 6h. Endpoints were clinical cure and microbiological response rates; pathogen eradication rates; length of hospital stay; hospital readmissions; and adverse events (AEs). Of 437 patients in the intent-to-treat population, 197 were efficacy evaluable. At test-of-cure, response rates were similar between groups. Within the efficacy evaluable population, 68% of P/T patients and 61% of IMP patients were clinically cured (). Microbiological responses for P/T and IMP patients were: eradication, 64% versus 59%; persistence, 29% versus 21%; relapse, 0% versus 5%; and superinfection, 7% versus 15%, respectively. Gram-positive isolates were eradicated in 83% of P/T patients and 75% of IMP patients; Gram-negative pathogens were eradicated in 72% of P/T patients and 77% of IMP patients. Treatment groups had similar number of mean hospital days, readmission rates, and frequency of AEs. This study showed that P/T administered four times per day was as safe and efficacious as IMP in treating hospitalized patients with NP. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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