Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8738537 | International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2018 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
The vancomycin minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) has been shown to affect the outcome of methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) bacteraemia. In this study, the outcomes of patients with MSSA bacteraemia with a vancomycin MICââ¥â1.5âmg/L were assessed. A prospective cohort of patients with MSSA bacteraemia in two tertiary-care hospitals was collected. The vancomycin MIC was determined by Etest. Staphylococcus aureus strains were categorised as low (<1.5âmg/L) or high (â¥1.5âmg/L) vancomycin MIC. First- and second-line treatments were recorded and classified as optimal, appropriate and inappropriate. The primary endpoint was 30-day mortality. A total of 250 patients with S. aureus bacteraemia were analysed, of whom 64 (25.6%) had strains with a high vancomycin MIC. History of dialysis (Pâ=â0.001) and ultimately fatal disease (Pâ=â0.005) were associated with strains with a high vancomycin MIC. The 30-day mortality was 24.7% (46/186) in patients with a low vancomycin MIC versus 28.1% (18/64) in patients with a high vancomycin MIC (Pâ=â0.592) and did not differ significantly after adjustment for the appropriateness of the antibiotic treatment. Patients with a high vancomycin MIC were less frequently associated with complicated bacteraemia (15.6% vs. 39.2%; Pâ=â0.001). In conclusion, vancomycin MICââ¥â1.5âmg/L was not associated with 30-day mortality but was associated with uncomplicated bacteraemia in MSSA bacteraemia, regardless of the first- and second-line treatment.
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Authors
Kevin Bouiller, Caroline Laborde, Serge Ludwig Aho, Didier Hocquet, André Pechinot, Vincent Le Moing, Xavier Bertrand, Lionel Piroth, Catherine Chirouze,