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Procalcitonin-guided antibiotic therapy algorithms for different types of acute respiratory infections based on previous trials

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-13, 12:56 authored by Philipp Schuetz, Rebekka Bolliger, Meret Merker, Mirjam Christ-Crain, Daiana Stolz, Michael Tamm, Charles E Luyt, Michel Wolff, Stefan Schroeder, Vandack Nobre, Konrad Reinhart, Angela Branche, Pierre Damas, Maarten Nijsten, Rodrigo O. Deliberato, Alessia Verduri, Bianca Beghé, Bin Cao, Yahya Shehabi, Jens-Ulrik S. Jensen, Albertus Beishuizen, Evelien de Jong, Matthias Briel, Tobias Welte, Beat Mueller

Introduction: Although evidence indicates that use of procalcitonin to guide antibiotic decisions for the treatment of acute respiratory infections (ARI) decreases antibiotic consumption and improves clinical outcomes, algorithms used within studies had differences in PCT cut-off points and frequency of testing. We therefore analyzed studies evaluating procalcitonin-guided antibiotic therapy and propose consensus algorithms for different respiratory infection types.

Areas covered: We systematically searched randomized-controlled trials (search strategy updated on February 2018) on procalcitonin-guided antibiotic therapy of ARI in adults using a pre-specified Cochrane protocol and analyzed algorithms from 32 trials that included 10,285 patients treated in primary care settings, emergency departments (ED), and intensive care units (ICU). We derived consensus algorithms for use of procalcitonin by the type of ARI including community-acquired pneumonia, bronchitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or asthma exacerbation, sepsis, and post-operative sepsis due to respiratory infection. Consensus algorithm recommendations differ with regard to timing of treatment (i.e. timing of initiation in low-risk patients or discontinuation in high-risk patients) and procalcitonin cut-off points for the recommendation/strong recommendation to discontinue antibiotics (≤ 0.25/≤ 0.1 µg/L in ED and inpatients, ≤ 0.5/≤ 0.25 µg/L in ICU patients, and reduction by ≥ 80% from peak levels in sepsis patients).

Expert commentary: Our proposed algorithms may facilitate safe and efficient implementation of procalcitonin-guided antibiotic protocols in diverse healthcare settings. Still, the decision about initiation and cessation of antibiotic treatment remains a clinical decision based on the patient assessment and the severity of illness and use of procalcitonin should not delay empirical treatment in high risk situations.

Funding

This study was supported by an unrestricted research grant from bioMérieux. The funder did not have any role in the interpretation of data.

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