section name header

Evidence summaries

Duration of Antibiotic Therapy for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia in Critically Ill Adults

A short fixed-course (7 or 8 days) antibiotic therapy may be more appropriate than a prolonged course (10 to 15 days) to treat patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia not due to non-fermenting Gram-negative bacilli (NF-GNB). Level of evidence: "C"

Comment: The quality of evidence is downgraded by study limitations(lack of blinding, selective outcome reporting, protocol violations) and byimprecise results (few patients, wide confidence intervals).

Summary

A Cochrane review [Abstract] 1 on the optimal duration of antibiotic therapy for hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) included 6 studies, with a total of 1 088 subjects. There was substantial variation in participants, in the diagnostic criteria used to define an episode of pneumonia, in the interventions and in the reported outcomes. No evidence was found relating to patients with a high probability of HAP who were not mechanically ventilated. For patients with VAP, overall a short seven- or eight-day course of antibiotics compared with a prolonged 10- to 15-day course increased 28-day antibiotic-free days (two studies; N = 431; mean difference (MD) 4.02 days; 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.26 to 5.78) and reduced recurrence of VAP due to multi-resistant organisms (one study; N = 110; odds ratio (OR) 0.44; 95% CI 0.21 to 0.95), without adversely affecting mortality and other recurrence outcomes. However, for cases of VAP specifically due to non-fermenting Gram-negative bacilli (NF-GNB), recurrence was greater after short-course therapy (two studies, N = 176; OR 2.18; 95% CI 1.14 to 4.16), though mortality outcomes were not significantly different. One study found that a three-day course of antibiotic therapy for patients with suspected HAP but a low Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score (CPIS) was associated with a significantly lower risk of superinfection or emergence of antimicrobial resistance, compared with standard (prolonged) course therapy.

Clinical comments

Note

Date of latest search:

References

  • Pugh R, Grant C, Cooke RP et al. Short-course versus prolonged-course antibiotic therapy for hospital-acquired pneumonia in critically ill adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2015;(8):CD007577. [PubMed]

Primary/Secondary Keywords