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Short- versus long-duration levofloxacin plus rifampicin for acute staphylococcal prosthetic joint infection managed with implant retention: a randomised clinical trial

Authors :
Alex Soriano
Joaquín García-Cañete
Mireia Puig-Asensio
Rocío Álvarez
María Carmen Fariñas
Oscar Murillo
Dolors Rodríguez-Pardo
Francisco Muntaner
Michel Fakkas
Sofía Ibarra
Jaime Lora-Tamayo
Gaspar de la Herrán
Cristina Campo
Pere Coll
Guillem Bori
Antonio Ramos
G. Euba
Javier Ariza
Alfredo Jover-Sáenz
Luisa Sorlí
Enrique Sandoval
Juan Pablo Horcajada
N. Benito
Maialen Ibarguren
Luis Falgueras
Isabel Mur
Mercè García-González
Laura Morata
Jaime Esteban
Patricia Ruiz-Garbajosa
Ramón Cisterna
Carles Pigrau
Ferran Pérez-Villar
A. Granados
Elena Múñez-Rubio
Josu Baraia-Etxaburu
José Antonio Iribarren
Andres Puente
Cecilia Peñas-Espinar
Roger Sordé-Masip
Gabriel Domecq
Xavier Cabo
Mar Sánchez-Somolinos
Melchor Riera
Miguel Ángel Muniain-Ezcurra
Alba Ribera
Joan Leal
Ana Isabel Suárez
Antonio Ramírez
Marcos Jordán
Laura Prats-Gispert
Gema Fresco
Íñigo López-Azkarreta
María Dolores del Toro
J.C. Martínez-Pastor
Luis Puig
Isabel Sánchez-Romero
Javier Jiménez-Cristóbal
Marta Fernandez-Sampedro
Antonio Blanco
Javier Cobo
Julián Palomino
Source :
International journal of antimicrobial agents. 48(3)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Levofloxacin plus rifampicin (L+R) is the treatment of choice for acute staphylococcal prosthetic joint infection (PJI) managed with debridement and implant retention (DAIR). Long courses have been empirically recommended, but some studies have suggested that shorter treatments could be as effective. Our aim was to prove that a short treatment schedule was non-inferior to the standard long schedule. An open-label, multicentre, randomised clinical trial (RCT) was performed. Patients with an early post-surgical or haematogenous staphylococcal PJI, managed with DAIR and initiated on L+R were randomised to receive 8 weeks of treatment (short schedule) versus a long schedule (3 months or 6 months for hip or knee prostheses, respectively). The primary endpoint was cure rate. From 175 eligible patients, 63 were included (52% women; median age, 72 years): 33 patients (52%) received the long schedule and 30 (48%) received the short schedule. There were no differences between the two groups except for a higher rate of polymicrobial infection in the long-schedule group (27% vs. 7%; P = 0.031). Median follow-up was 540 days. In the intention-to-treat analysis, cure rates were 58% and 73% in patients receiving the long and short schedules, respectively (difference −15.7%, 95% CI −39.2% to 7.8%). Forty-four patients (70%) were evaluable per-protocol: cure rates were 95.0% and 91.7% for the long and short schedules, respectively (difference 3.3%, 95% CI −11.7% to 18.3%). This is the first RCT suggesting that 8 weeks of L+R could be non-inferior to longer standard treatments for acute staphylococcal PJI managed with DAIR.

Details

ISSN :
18727913
Volume :
48
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of antimicrobial agents
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae6602429d2af21f4384b2558d65ae07