Clinical outcomes of temocillin use for invasive Enterobacterales infections: a single-centre retrospective analysis

Author:

Heard Katie L1,Killington Kieran1,Mughal Nabeela123,Moore Luke S P123,Hughes Stephen1

Affiliation:

1. Chelsea and Westminster NHS Foundation Trust, 369 Fulham Road, London SW10 9NH, UK

2. North West London Pathology, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, Fulham Palace Road. London W6 8RF, UK

3. National Institute for Health Research Health Protection Research Unit in Healthcare Associated Infections and Antimicrobial Resistance, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Campus, Du Cane Road, London W12 0NN, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background With increasing frequency of resistant Gram-negative bacteria, temocillin has potential utility in reducing carbapenem use. The 2020 EUCAST guideline changes temocillin breakpoints and reclassifies isolates with an MIC of 0.001–16 mg/L as ‘susceptible, increased exposure’ necessitating 6 g/day rather than the previous 4 g/day, associated with significant cost implications. Objectives We explore the clinical utility and treatment failure rate of temocillin at 4 g/day dosing. Methods All adult inpatient electronic prescriptions of temocillin (3 days or greater) from March 2016 to October 2019 were retrieved using a clinical decision support system (ICNET®). Treatment success was defined as survival, no switch to broad-spectrum agent for the same indication and no subsequent recrudescence of infection, occurring within 30 days. Results Temocillin was used in 205 eligible patient-episodes, median age 79 years (IQR : 71–87 years), 42.4% female. Median temocillin course length was 5.9 days (IQR : 4.6–7.8 days). Indications for use: urinary tract infection (UTI) (n = 141), pneumonia (n = 53), other (n = 11). In total, 144 (70.2%) patients had targeted treatment; 74 (36.1%) against Escherichia coli, 70 (34.4%) other Enterobacterales. A total of 130 (63%) patients received 4 g/day; the remaining patients had reduced renal function with dosing in accordance with guidance. Overall temocillin treatment success was 79.5%; highest when used to treat UTI 85.8% (versus 67.9% in respiratory infections, P = 0.008). Empirical treatment demonstrated 82.0% (50/61) success [versus 78.5% (113/144) among targeted treatment, P = 0. 71]. Conclusions Temocillin at 4 g/day is an effective and safe alternative in treating patients with Gram-negative infections, but should be considered in the context of patient age and comorbidities. Increased dosing or alternate strategies may be indicated when the infection is not of a urinary source.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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