Author:
Gavazzi Gaëtan,Drevet Sabine,Debray Matthieu,Bosson Jean Luc,Tidadini Fatah,Paccalin Marc,de Wazieres Benoit,Celarier Thomas,Bonnefoy Marc,Vitrat Virginie
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Treating pneumonia in old patients remains challenging for clinicians. Moreover, bacterial antimicrobial resistance is a major public health threat.
Objective
The PROPAGE study evaluated the interest of a strategy using serial measurements of procalcitonin (PCT) to reduce the duration of antibiotic therapy in old patients with pneumonia.
Methods
PROPAGE took place from Dec.-2013 to Jun.-2016 in eight French geriatric units. It was a prospective, comparative, randomised, open-label study involving old patients (≥ 80 years) who had initiated antibiotic treatment for pneumonia in the previous 48 h. PCT was monitored in all patients and two decision-making PCT-based algorithms guided antibiotic therapy in patients from the PCT group.
Results
107 patients were randomised (PCT, n = 50; Control, n = 57). Antibiotic therapy exposure was reduced in the PCT group as compared to the Control group (median duration of antibiotic therapy, 8 vs. 10 days [rank-test, p = 0.001]; antibiotic persistence rates on Days 6 and 8, 54% and 44% vs. 91% and 72%) and no significant difference was found in recovery rate (84% vs. 89.5%; Pearson Chi² test, p = 0.402).
Conclusion
Although, the superiority of the strategy was not tested using a composite criterion combining antibiotic therapy duration and recovery rate was not tested due to the small sample size, the present study showed that monitoring associated with PCT-guided algorithm could help shorten antibiotic treatment duration in the very old patients without detrimental effects. Measuring PCT levels between Day 4 and Day 6 could be helpful when making the decision regarding antibiotic discontinuation.
Trial registration
NCT02173613. This study was first registered on 25/06/2014.
Funder
Thermo Fisher Scientific
Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique, French Ministry of Health
bioMérieux
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology
Cited by
5 articles.
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