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Effect of clarithromycin in patients with suspected Gram-negative sepsis: results of a randomized controlled trial

Authors :
Androniki Marioli
Theodora Kanni
Apostolos Armaganidis
Vassiliki Mylona
Nikolaos A. Maniatis
Basileios Papaziogas
Athina Savva
Ioannis Koutelidakis
Emmanuel E. Douzinas
Iraklis Tsangaris
Maria Raftogiannis
Petros Kopterides
Aikaterini Spyridaki
Antonia-Panagiota Georgopoulou
Antigone Kotsaki
Thomas Tsaganos
Ilia Vaki
Evangelos J. Giamarellos-Bourboulis
Fotini Baziaka
Evangelos Papadomichelakis
Aimilia Pelekanou
Nikolaos Pelekanos
Christos Papageorgiou
Maria Mouktaroudi
Malvina Ladas
Charalambos Gogos
Korina Lymberopoulou
Georgios Koratzanis
Anastasia Antonopoulou
Pantelis Koutoukas
Source :
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy. 69(4)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Background A previous randomized study showed that clarithromycin decreases the risk of death due to ventilator-associated pneumonia and shortens the time until infection resolution. The efficacy of clarithromycin was tested in a larger population with sepsis. Methods Six hundred patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome due to acute pyelonephritis, acute intra-abdominal infections or primary Gram-negative bacteraemia were enrolled in a double-blind, randomized, multicentre trial. Clarithromycin (1 g) was administered intravenously once daily for 4 days consecutively in 302 patients; another 298 patients were treated with placebo. Mortality was the primary outcome; resolution of infection and hospitalization costs were the secondary outcomes. Results The groups were well matched for demographics, disease severity, microbiology and appropriateness of the administered antimicrobials. Overall 28 day mortality was 17.1% (51 deaths) in the placebo arm and 18.5% (56 deaths) in the clarithromycin arm (P = 0.671). Nineteen out of 26 placebo-treated patients with septic shock and multiple organ dysfunctions died (73.1%) compared with 15 out of 28 clarithromycin-treated patients (53.6%, P = 0.020). The median time until resolution of infection was 5 days in both arms. In the subgroup with severe sepsis/shock, this was 10 days in the placebo arm and 6 days in the clarithromycin arm (P = 0.037). The cost of hospitalization was lower after treatment with clarithromycin (P = 0.044). Serious adverse events were observed in 1.3% and 0.7% of placebo- and clarithromycin-treated patients, respectively (P = 0.502). Conclusions Intravenous clarithromycin did not affect overall mortality; however, administration shortened the time to resolution of infection and decreased the hospitalization costs.

Details

ISSN :
14602091
Volume :
69
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a1a670af9a5abbe06c31041e5db8d90a