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Published in: European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases 12/2018

01-12-2018 | Original Article

The association between treatment appropriateness according to EUCAST and CLSI breakpoints and mortality among patients with candidemia: a retrospective observational study

Authors: Nesrin Ghanem-Zoubi, Danny Zorbavel, Johad Khoury, Yuval Geffen, Majd Qasum, Svetlana Predescu, Mical Paul

Published in: European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | Issue 12/2018

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Abstract

To evaluate the association between appropriate antifungal treatment and mortality among patients with candidemia using different breakpoint definitions. In a retrospective study, we included all adults with candidemia in a tertiary center between 2009 and 2015. We defined three versions of appropriate (covering) antifungal treatment, according to Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) 2008, CLSI 2012, and European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) (2017 update) breakpoints. For empiric treatment, we evaluated the association with 30-day mortality. For definitive treatment, we evaluated the association with 90-day mortality among patients surviving the first week after candidemia onset. Adjusted odds ratios (OR) from a bivariate logistic regression with 95% confidence intervals are reported. We identified 302 patients with 308 separate candidemia episodes. The crude 30-day mortality was 55% (168/308). Resistance to anidulafungin increased from 3.5 to 51.6% and to fluconazole from 15.2 to 44.1%, when applying CLSI 2008 and EUCAST definitions, respectively. Appropriate empirical treatment was significantly associated with lower 30-day mortality using the CLSI 2008 definitions, adjusted OR 0.56 (0.33–0.96). The associations were similar, though not statistically significant for EUCAST, 0.58 (0.33–1.00), and CLSI 2012, OR 0.62 (0.37–1.04). Appropriate definitive treatment according to CLSI 2012 and EUCAST was independently associated with lower 90-day mortality, ORs 0.31 (0.13–0.75) and 0.44 (0.23–0.8), respectively. With CLSI 2008, the association was similar but not statistically significant, OR 0.4 (0.11–1.41), with few isolates classified as resistant. Considering the major shift in resistance prevalence when applying CLSI 2008, CLSI 2012, and EUCAST breakpoint definitions, no major differences were observed in their association with mortality.
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Metadata
Title
The association between treatment appropriateness according to EUCAST and CLSI breakpoints and mortality among patients with candidemia: a retrospective observational study
Authors
Nesrin Ghanem-Zoubi
Danny Zorbavel
Johad Khoury
Yuval Geffen
Majd Qasum
Svetlana Predescu
Mical Paul
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases / Issue 12/2018
Print ISSN: 0934-9723
Electronic ISSN: 1435-4373
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10096-018-3389-1

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