作者
Stéphan Ehrmann,François Barbier,Julien Demiselle,Jean‐Pierre Quenot,Jean‐Etienne Herbrecht,Damien Roux,Jean-Claude Lachérade,Mickaël Landais,Philippe Séguin,David Schnell,Anne Veinstein,Philippe Gouin,Sigismond Lasocki,Qin Lü,G. Béduneau,Martine Ferrandière,Gaëtan Plantefève,Claire Dahyot‐Fizelier,Nader Chebib,Emmanuelle Mercier,Nathalie Heuzé-Vourc’h,Renaud Respaud,Nicolas Grégoire,Denis Garot,Mai-Anh Nay,Ferhat Meziani,Pascal Andreu,Raphaël Clère-Jehl,Noémie Zucman,Marie-Ange Azaïs,Marjorie Saint-Martin,Charlotte Salmon Gandonnière,Dalila Benzekri,Hamid Merdji,Elsa Tavernier
摘要
BackgroundWhether preventive inhaled antibiotics may reduce the incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia is unclear.MethodsIn this investigator-initiated, multicenter, double-blind, randomized, controlled, superiority trial, we assigned critically ill adults who had been undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation for at least 72 hours to receive inhaled amikacin at a dose of 20 mg per kilogram of ideal body weight once daily or to receive placebo for 3 days. The primary outcome was a first episode of ventilator-associated pneumonia during 28 days of follow-up. Safety was assessed.Download a PDF of the Research Summary.ResultsA total of 850 patients underwent randomization, and 847 were included in the analyses (417 assigned to the amikacin group and 430 to the placebo group). All three daily nebulizations were received by 337 patients (81%) in the amikacin group and 355 patients (83%) in the placebo group. At 28 days, ventilator-associated pneumonia had developed in 62 patients (15%) in the amikacin group and in 95 patients (22%) in the placebo group (difference in restricted mean survival time to ventilator-associated pneumonia, 1.5 days; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.6 to 2.5; P=0.004). An infection-related ventilator-associated complication occurred in 74 patients (18%) in the amikacin group and in 111 patients (26%) in the placebo group (hazard ratio, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.50 to 0.89). Trial-related serious adverse effects were seen in 7 patients (1.7%) in the amikacin group and in 4 patients (0.9%) in the placebo group.ConclusionsAmong patients who had undergone mechanical ventilation for at least 3 days, a subsequent 3-day course of inhaled amikacin reduced the burden of ventilator-associated pneumonia during 28 days of follow-up. (Funded by the French Ministry of Health; AMIKINHAL ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03149640; EUDRA Clinical Trials number, 2016-001054-17.) Quick Take Inhaled Amikacin to Prevent Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia 1m 48s