Conventional Hospitalization versus Sequential Outpatient Parenteral Antibiotic Therapy for Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia: Post-Hoc Analysis of a Multicenter Observational Cohort
Castillo-Fernández, N.; Pérez-Crespo, P.M.M.; Salamanca-Rivera, E.; Herrera-Hidalgo, L.; de Alarcón, A.; Navarro-Amuedo, M.D.; Marrodán Ciordia, T.; Perez Rodriguez, Maria Teresa; Sevilla-Blanco, J.; Jover-Saenz, A.; Fernández-Suárez, J.; Armiñanzas-Castillo, C.; Reguera-Iglesias, J.M.; Natera Kindelán, C.; Boix-Palop, L.; León Jiménez, E.; Galán-Sánchez, F.; del Arco Jiménez, A.; Bahamonde-Carrasco, A.; Vinuesa García, D.; Smithson Amat, A.; Cuquet Pedragosa, J.; Reche Molina, I.M.; Pérez Camacho, I.; Merino de Lucas, E.; Gutiérrez-Gutiérrez, B.; Rodríguez Baño, J.; López Cortés, L.E.

Identifiers
Identifiers
Files view or download
Files view or download
Date issued
2023Journal title
Antibiotics
Type of content
Artigo
Abstract
It is not known whether sequential outpatient parenteral antimicrobial (OPAT) is as safe and effective as conventional hospitalization in patients with S. aureus bacteremia (SAB). A post-hoc analysis of the comparative effectiveness of conventional hospitalization versus sequential OPAT was performed in two prospective Spanish cohorts of patients with S. aureus bacteremia. The PROBAC cohort is a national, multicenter, prospective observational cohort of patients diagnosed in 22 Spanish hospitals between October 2016 and March 2017. The DOMUS OPAT cohort is a prospective observational cohort including patients from two university hospitals in Seville, Spain from 2012 to 2021. Multivariate regression was performed, including a propensity score (PS) for receiving OPAT, stratified analysis according to PS quartiles, and matched pair analyses based on PS. Four hundred and thirteen patients were included in the analysis: 150 in sequential OPAT and 263 in the full hospitalization therapy group. In multivariate analysis, including PS and center effect as covariates, 60-day treatment failure was lower in the OPAT group than in the full hospitalization group (p < 0.001; OR 0.275, 95%CI 0.129-0.584). In the PS-based matched analyses, sequential treatment under OPAT was not associated with higher 60-day treatment failure (p = 0.253; adjusted OR 0.660; % CI 0.324-1.345). OPAT is a safe and effective alternative to conventional in-patient therapy for completion of treatment in well-selected patients with SAB, mainly those associated with a low-risk source and without end-stage kidney disease.
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
