by Maëlle Martin,
Solène Forveille, Jean-Baptiste Lascarrou, Amélie Seguin, Emmanuel Canet,
Jérémie Lemarié, Maïté Agbakou, Luc Desmedt, Gauthier Blonz, Olivier Zambon,
Stéphane Corvec, Aurélie Le Thuaut and Jean Reignier
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 14,
Article number: 33 (2024) Published: 27
February 2024
Background
Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is the leading
nosocomial infection in critical care and is associated with adverse outcomes.
When VAP is suspected, starting antibiotic therapy (AT) immediately after
pulmonary sampling may expose uninfected patients to unnecessary treatment,
whereas waiting for bacteriological confirmation may delay AT in infected
patients. As no robust data exist to choose between these strategies, the
decision must balance the pre-test diagnostic probability, clinical severity, and
risk of antimicrobial resistance. The objective of this study in patients with
suspected non-severe VAP was to compare immediate AT started after sampling to
conservative AT upon receipt of positive microbiological results. The outcomes
were antibiotic sparing, AT suitability, and patient outcomes.
Methods
This single-center, before–after study included consecutive
patients who underwent distal respiratory sampling for a first suspected
non-severe VAP episode (no shock requiring vasopressor therapy or severe acute
respiratory distress syndrome). AT was started immediately after sampling in
2019 and upon culture positivity in 2022 (conservative strategy). The primary
outcome was the number of days alive without AT by day 28. The secondary
outcomes were mechanical ventilation duration, day-28 mortality, and AT suitability
(active necessary AT or spared AT).
Results
The immediate and conservative strategies were applied in 44
and 43 patients, respectively. Conservative and immediate AT were associated
with similar days alive without AT (median [interquartile range], 18.0 [0–21.0]
vs. 16.0 [0–20.0], p = 0.50) and without broad-spectrum AT (p = 0.53) by
day 28. AT was more often suitable in the conservative group (88.4% vs.
63.6%, p = 0.01), in which 27.9% of patients received no AT at all. No
significant differences were found for mechanical ventilation duration (median
[95%CI], 9.0 [6–19] vs. 9.0 [6–24] days, p = 0.65) or day-28 mortality
(hazard ratio [95%CI], 0.85 [0.4–2.0], p = 0.71).
Conclusion
In patients with suspected non-severe VAP, waiting for
microbiological confirmation was not associated with antibiotic sparing,
compared to immediate AT. This result may be ascribable to low statistical
power. AT suitability was better with the conservative strategy. None of the
safety outcomes differed between groups. These findings would seem to allow a
large, randomized trial comparing immediate and conservative AT strategies.
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