Conference Coverage

Don’t shorten therapy for older, sicker cellulitis patients


 

REPORTING FROM ECCMID 2018

– An attempt to balance effective treatment with good antibiotic stewardship fell short when patients with cellulitis who got 6 days of flucloxacillin relapsed significantly sooner and more frequently than did those who received the standard 12 days of treatment.

While cellulitis cure rates at 14 and 28 days were similar between the two groups, 90-day relapse rates were significantly higher for those who took the 6-day course (23.5% vs. 6%), Duncan R. Cranendonk, MD, said at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases annual conference. The cohort demographics perhaps played into this finding: Most of the group was elderly, hospitalized, and had comorbid conditions.

Dr. Duncan R. Cranendonk of the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands Michele G. Sullivan/MDedge News

“However, this is the population clinicians are most likely to see,” said Dr Cranendonk of the University of Amsterdam. “It appears that therapy cannot be safely shortened in this population.”

In light of recent antibiotic trials showing that shorter courses can be as effective as prolonged treatment, Dr. Cranendonk and his colleagues conducted the DANCE (Duration of Antibiotic Therapy for Cellulitis) trial. The study investigated the efficacy of an abbreviated course of intravenous flucloxacillin among 248 patients with cellulitis admitted to 11 Dutch hospitals. At treatment day 6, those who had clinically improved after their initial treatment were randomized to 6 additional days of IV flucloxacillin or to placebo. The primary outcome was cure by day 14 without relapse by day 28.

A 2004 study successfully paved the way for DANCE, Dr. Cranendonk noted. That trial examined 5 versus 10 days of levofloxacin 500 mg for uncomplicated cellulitis in 87 patients. The outcome was positive: There was no significant difference in clinical outcome between the two arms, with a 98% cure rate in both groups.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Common food additive makes C. difficile more virulent
MDedge Infectious Disease
Predicting MDR Gram-negative infection mortality risk
MDedge Infectious Disease
Antibiotic choice for acute otitis media 2018
MDedge Infectious Disease
Drug combo indicated for bacterial pneumonia
MDedge Infectious Disease
Reported penicillin allergies hike inpatient costs
MDedge Infectious Disease
FDA warns against clarithromycin use in patients with heart disease
MDedge Infectious Disease
QI initiative reduces antibiotic use in chorioamnionitis-exposed newborns
MDedge Infectious Disease
Unusual antibiotic resistance found in more than 200 bacteria
MDedge Infectious Disease
MDedge Daily News: Antibiotic resistance leads to ‘nightmare’ bacteria
MDedge Infectious Disease
FDA advisory committee votes to recommend first once-daily aminoglycoside antibiotic
MDedge Infectious Disease