来自2个学术医学中心的回顾性队列研究:口服与静脉注射抗生素治疗糖尿病性骨髓炎。

IF 2.2
Jennifer A Kipp, Lindsay K LeSavage, Joni K Evans, Julia C Tolin, Julianne Vesce, Travis Denmeade, Ricardo Arbulu, Jeffrey Manway, Cody D Blazek
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:美国传染病学会指南建议在残余骨髓炎的情况下延长抗生素疗程。最近发表的文献表明,在治疗骨科感染时,口服抗生素可能提供与静脉注射抗生素相当的结果。在之前的一项研究中,我们在一家学术医疗机构调查了糖尿病足感染患者两种抗生素给药途径的结果。方法:回顾性评价196例在2个学术医疗中心接受口服或静脉注射抗生素治疗截肢术后残留感染的患者的治疗效果。如果患者完成至少4周的抗生素治疗,伤口完全愈合,并且在首次手术后1年内不需要额外的清创或截肢,则认为治疗成功。结果:在进行回顾性图表回顾后,在WFBMC (P = 0.34)或UPMC (P = 0.99)接受口服或静脉注射抗生素的患者之间的治疗成功率没有差异。当结合机构数据时,成功率没有差异(P = .52)。口服抗生素治疗的中位愈合时间为3.21个月,静脉注射治疗的中位愈合时间为3.85个月(P = 0.16)。不同治疗方式的再手术率差异无统计学意义(P = 0.53)。治疗成功患者的血红蛋白A1c值(8.6±2.3)低于治疗失败患者(9.5±2.5)(P = 0.016)。结论:本研究支持将口服抗生素作为糖尿病残余骨髓炎患者的可行选择。在治疗成功率、愈合时间或再手术率方面没有观察到显著差异,尽管该研究没有确定等效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Retrospective Cohort Study From 2 Academic Medical Centers: Oral vs Intravenous Antibiotics for Diabetic Osteomyelitis.

Background: The Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines recommend a prolonged course of antibiotics in the setting of residual osteomyelitis. More recently published literature suggests that oral antibiotics may offer comparable outcomes to intravenously administered antibiotics when treating orthopaedic infections. In a prior study, we investigated the outcomes of both routes of antibiotic administration in patients with diabetic foot infections at a single academic medical institution.

Methods: The goal of this study is to retrospectively evaluate the therapeutic success in 196 patients receiving oral or intravenous antibiotics for treatment of residual infection following amputation at 2 academic medical centers. Treatment was considered successful if patients who completed a minimum of 4 weeks of antibiotic therapy had complete wound healing and did not require additional debridement or amputation within 1 year of their initial surgery.

Results: After performing a retrospective chart review, no difference was determined in treatment success between patients who underwent oral or intravenous antibiotics at either WFBMC (P = .34) or UPMC (P = .99). No difference in success was found when combining institutional data (P = .52). The median time to healing for oral antibiotics was 3.21 months compared with 3.85 months for intravenous (P = .16). Reoperation rates did not differ among treatment types (P = .53). Hemoglobin A1c values were lower among patients with treatment success (8.6 ± 2.3) versus failure (9.5 ± 2.5) (P = .016).

Conclusion: This study supports the consideration of oral antibiotics as a viable option for selected diabetic patients with residual osteomyelitis. No significant differences were observed in treatment success, healing time, or reoperation rates, although the study was not powered to determine equivalence.

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