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Title: | Empirical cefepime plus vancomycin versus ceftazidime plus vancomycin versus meropenem plus vancomycin in the treatment of healthcare-associated meningitis: results of the multicenter ephesus study | Authors: | Sipahi, Oğuz Reşat Akyol, Deniz Örmen, Bahar Çicek Şentürk, Gönül Mermer, Sinan Önal, Uğur Amer, Fatma Saed, Maysaa Abdallah Tükenmez Tigen, Elif Öztoprak, Nefise Altın, Ümmugülsüm Kurtaran, Behice Popescu, Corneliu Petru Sakci, Mustafa Suntur, Bedia Mutay Gautam, Vikas Sharma, Megha Kaya, Şafak Akçıl, Eren Fatma Kaya, Selçuk Turunç, Tuba Ergen, Pınar Kandemir, Özlem Cesur, Salih Bardak Özcem, Selin Özgiray, Erkin Yurtseven, Taşkın Erdem, Hüseyin Aytaç Sipahi, Hilal Arda, Bilgin Pullukcu, Huesnue Taşbakan, Meltem Yamazhan, Tansu Aydemir, Söhret Ulusoy, Sercan Özdemir, Kevser |
Keywords: | Healthcare-associated meningitis Empirical therapy Multicenter study Glycopeptides Antibiotics Nosocomial Bacterial-Meningitis Resistant Staphylococcus-Aureus Practice Guidelines Clinical-Features Management Adults Ventriculitis Series |
Publisher: | Bmc | Abstract: | Background Herein, we analyzed the efficacy of main antibiotic therapy regimens in the treatment of healthcare-associated meningitis (HCAM).Materials/methods This retrospective cohort study was conducted in 18 tertiary-care academic hospitals Turkey, India, Egypt and Romania. We extracted data and outcomes of all patients with post-neurosurgical meningitis cases fulfilling the study inclusion criteria and treated with empirical therapy between December 2006-September 2018.Results Twenty patients in the cefepime + vancomycin-(CV) group, 31 patients in the ceftazidime + vancomycin-(CFV) group, and 119 patients in the meropenem + vancomycin-(MV) group met the inclusion criteria. The MV subgroup had a significantly higher mean Glasgow Coma Score, a higher rate of admission to the intensive care unit within the previous month, and a higher rate of antibiot herapy within the previous month before the meningitis episode (p < 0.05). Microbiological success on Day 3-5, end of treatment (EOT) clinical success (80% vs. 54.8%% vs 57.9%), and overall success (EOT success followed by one-month survival without relapse or reinfection 65% vs. 51.6% vs. 45.3%), EOT all cause mortality (ACM) and day 30 ACM (15% vs. 22.6% vs. 26%) did not differ significantly (p > 0.05) among the three cohorts. No regimen was effective against carbapenem-resistant bacteria, and vancomycin resulted in an EOT clinical success rate of 60.6% in the methicillin-resistant staphylococci or ampicillin-resistant enterococci subgroup (n = 34).Conclusions Our study showed no significant difference in terms of clinical success and mortality among the three treatment options. All regimens were ineffective against carbapenem-resistant bacteria. Vancomycin was unsuccessful in approximately 40% of cases involving methicillin-resistant staphylococci or ampicillin-resistant enterococci. | URI: | https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-023-08596-z https://hdl.handle.net/11499/54966 |
ISSN: | 1471-2334 |
Appears in Collections: | PubMed İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / PubMed Indexed Publications Collection Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection Tıp Fakültesi Koleksiyonu WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / WoS Indexed Publications Collection |
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EBSCO-FullText-2024-01-31 (1).pdf | 1.19 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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