From the Journals

Combo therapy does not improve outcomes for A. Baumannii


 

FROM THE LANCET INFECTIOUS DISEASES


The results highlight “the necessity of assessing combination therapy in randomized trials before adopting it into clinical use,” the researchers said.

The study was not designed to examine the effect of the two types of therapy on bacteria other than A. baumannii, the researchers noted. However, based on the findings, “we recommend against the routine use of carbapenems for the treatment of carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii infections,” they said.

The study was supported by EU AIDA grant Health-F3-2011-278348. Dr. Paul had no financial conflicts to disclose.

SOURCE: Paul M et al. Lancet Infect Dis. 2018 Feb 15. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(18)30099-9.

Pages

Recommended Reading

This is what a flu pandemic looks like
MDedge Infectious Disease
New C. difficile guidelines recommend fecal microbiota transplants
MDedge Infectious Disease
MMWR: Current flu vaccine does not protect elderly
MDedge Infectious Disease
Flu increase may be slowing
MDedge Infectious Disease
Gut-homing protein predicts HIV-acquisition, disease progression in women
MDedge Infectious Disease
Inflammatory markers predict vaccine response in HCV, HIV
MDedge Infectious Disease
Viremic suppression linked to decreased MACE rate in patients with HCV-cirrhosis
MDedge Infectious Disease
ACIP unanimously recommends HEPLISAV-B
MDedge Infectious Disease
FDA warns against clarithromycin use in patients with heart disease
MDedge Infectious Disease
Flu season shows signs of slowing
MDedge Infectious Disease