• Intensive care medicine · Mar 2001

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Efficacy and tolerability of piperacillin/tazobactam versus ceftazidime in association with amikacin for treating nosocomial pneumonia in intensive care patients: a prospective randomized multicenter trial.

    • F Alvarez-Lerma, J Insausti-Ordeñana, R Jordá-Marcos, E Maraví-Poma, A Torres-Martí, J Nava, A Martínez-Pellús, M Palomar, F Barcenilla, and Spanish Collaborative Group for the Study of Severe Infections.
    • Intensive Care Unit, Hospital del Mar, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Passeig Marítim 25-29, 08003 Barcelona, Spain. 16839@imas.imim.es
    • Intensive Care Med. 2001 Mar 1;27(3):493-502.

    ObjectiveTo compare clinical and bacteriological efficacy as well as tolerability of two regimens of broad-spectrum antibiotics (ceftazidime versus piperacillin/tazobactam) combined with amikacin in the treatment of nosocomial pneumonia in intensive care patients.DesignOpen label, prospective, multicenter, and randomized phase III clinical trial.SettingMedical or surgical intensive care units (ICUs) of nine acute-care teaching hospitals in Spain.Patients And ParticipantsOne hundred and twenty-four ICU patients with nosocomial pneumonia and requiring mechanical ventilation were included. They were randomized to receive amikacin (15 mg/day divided into two doses) combined with either piperacillin (4 g every 6 h) and tazobactam (0.5 g every 6 h) (n = 88) or ceftazidime (2 g every 8 h) (n = 36).Measurements And ResultsThe causative pathogen was determined in 60.2% of patients in the group of amikacin plus piperacillin/tazobactam and in 76.9% in the group of amikacin plus ceftazidime. A total of 94 bacterial organisms were isolated among which gram-negative bacilli predominated, Pseudomonas aeruginosa being the most frequent. Clinical response at the end of antibiotic therapy was considered satisfactory (cure and/or improvement) in 63.9% of patients in the amikacin plus piperacillin/tazobactam group and in 61.5% in the amikacin plus ceftazidime (odds ratio 1.1; 95% confidence interval 0.44-2.75). Eradication or presumptive eradication rates for each pathogen and for either gram-negative or gram-positive bacteria were similar in both antibiotic combinations (odds ratio 1.2; 95% confidence interval 0.39-3.66). A total of 21 adverse effects (23.9%) occurred in the amikacin plus piperacillin and tazobactam group and six (16.7%) in the amikacin plus ceftazidime group, thrombocytosis, renal dysfunction, and hepatic cytolysis being the most common. The efficacy and tolerability of the two therapeutic regimens were similar not only in the whole study population, but also in the subset of P. aeruginosa-related pneumonia (odds ratio 1; 95% confidence interval 0.08-13.37).ConclusionsAmikacin associated with either ceftazidime or piperacillin and tazobactam has shown comparable efficacy and tolerability in the treatment of ICU patients with nosocomial pneumonia.

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