CONTINUOUS-INFUSION VANCOMYCIN THERAPY FO R PATIENTS WITH SEVERE BONEAND JOINT INFECTIONS DUE TO MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT STAPHYLOCOCCAL STRAINS

Citation
N. Desplaces et al., CONTINUOUS-INFUSION VANCOMYCIN THERAPY FO R PATIENTS WITH SEVERE BONEAND JOINT INFECTIONS DUE TO MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT STAPHYLOCOCCAL STRAINS, Medecine et maladies infectieuses, 27, 1997, pp. 969-974
Citations number
22
ISSN journal
0399077X
Volume
27
Year of publication
1997
Pages
969 - 974
Database
ISI
SICI code
0399-077X(1997)27:<969:CVTFRP>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
31 patients with severe bone and joint infections due to multi-drug re sistant staphylococcal strains (S. aureus = 21 patients, S. epidermidi s = 10 patients) received continuous-infusion vancomycin (CIV) therapy in combination with one or two Other antibiotics after debridement an d removal of all foreign material (osteosynthesis = 8 patients, total joint arthroplasty = 15 patients). Vancomycin and teicoplanin MICs wer e 2-4 mu g/ml et 4-16 mu g/ml respectively. The mean duration of CIV w as 62 days (range 42-78d) for 28 patients and 3 patients had longer CI V (8, 10 and 14 months) because of duration and severity of infections . CIV therapy consisted of 40 to 100 mg/Kg/d infused over 24 h to obta in serum vancomycin concentrations reaching 40 mu g/ml. In 20 patients , vancomycin levels in infected bone and tissues ranged between 30 to 80 mu g/g at initiation of therapy; they increased to 50-130 mu g/g af ter 1 month of treatment. 30 out of 31 patients were apparently cured (follow-up at least 2 years) and 13 out of 15 patients underwent total joint replacement. Tolerance of 4 to 6 g per day of CIV was excellent . Neither hematological or cutaneous toxicity nor hearing loss were re ported in these carefully monitored patients. Transient renal insuffic iency was reported in 2 patients treated with furosemide. CIV was well tolerated and easy to monitor. Its efficiency depends on the quality of the excisional surgery.