作者
Adrien Bouglé,Sophie Tuffet,Laura Federici,Marc Léone,Antoine Monsel,Thomas Dessalle,Julien Amour,Claire Dahyot‐Fizelier,François Barbier,Charles Burdet,Olivier Langeron,Bernard Cholley,Bernard Cholley,Tarik Hissem,Tarik Hissem,Benoît Veber,Matthieu Legrand,Alexandre Demoule,Alexandre Demoule,Marc Léone,Alexandra Rousseau,Alexandra Rousseau,Arnaud Foucrier,Adrien Bouglé,Julien Amour,Thomas Dessalle,Florence Bellenfant Zegdi,Bernard Cholley,Julien Massot,Marc Léone,Alexandre Demoule,Julien Mayaux,Vincent Dubée,Hervé Quintard,Jacques Duranteau,Laura Federici,Arnaud Foucrier,Thomas Geeraerts,Céline Guichon,Alexandre Demoule,Éric Kipnis,Sigismond Lasocki,Tarik Hissem,Matthieu Legrand,Marc Léone,Thomas Lescot,Bruno Lévy,Joël Cousson,Philippe Montravers,Sébastien Tanaka,Emmanuel Novy,Alexandre Ouattara,Jean‐François Payen,Walter Picard,Pascale Poète,Bernard Cholley,Christophe Quesnel,Muriel Fartoukh,Anoine Tesniere,Mélanie Fromentin,Jean‐Jacques Rouby,Qin Lü,Olivier Langeron,Pierre Squara,Éric Levesque,Nicolas Mongardon,Alexandra Rousseau,Laurence Bérard,Marine Cachanado,Nora Soussi
摘要
PurposeCompared to long duration of antibiotic therapy, a short duration has a comparable clinical efficacy for ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), with the exception of documented VAP of non-fermenting Gram-negative bacilli (NF-GNB), including Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA). We aimed to assess the non-inferiority of a short duration of antibiotics (8 days) vs. prolonged antibiotic therapy (15 days) in VAP due to PA (PA-VAP).MethodsWe conducted a nationwide, randomized, open-labeled, multicenter, non-inferiority trial to evaluate optimal duration of antibiotic treatment in PA-VAP. Eligible patients were adults with diagnosis of PA-VAP and randomly assigned in 1:1 ratio to receive a short-duration treatment (8 days) or a long-duration treatment (15 days). A pre-specified analysis was used to assess a composite endpoint combining mortality and PA-VAP recurrence rate during hospitalization in the intensive care unit (ICU) within 90 days.ResultsIn intention-to-treat population (n = 186), the percentage of patients who reached the composite endpoint was 25.5% (N = 25/98) in the 15-day group versus 35.2% (N = 31/88) in the 8-day group (difference 9.7%, 90% confidence interval (CI) 0.0–21.2%). The percentage of recurrence of PA-VAP during the ICU stay was 9.2% in the 15-day group versus 17% in the 8-day group. The two groups had similar median days of mechanical ventilation, of ICU stay, number of extra pulmonary infections and acquisition of multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens during ICU stay.ConclusionsOur study showed no differences in the composite or separate outcomes (90-day mortality or VAP recurrence) between short- and long-duration treatments for PA-VAP. However, the lack of power limits the interpretation of this study.