Oral Antibiotics for Bacteremia and Infective Endocarditis: Current Evidence and Future Perspectives.
Gerasimos EleftheriotisMarkos MarangosMaria LagadinouSanjay BhaganiStelios F AssimakopoulosPublished in: Microorganisms (2023)
Bacteremia and endocarditis are two clinical syndromes that, for decades, were managed exclusively with parenteral antimicrobials, irrespective of a given patient's clinical condition, causative pathogen, or its antibiotic susceptibility profile. This clinical approach, however, was based on low-quality data and outdated expert opinions. When a patient's condition has improved, gastrointestinal absorption is not compromised, and an oral antibiotic regimen reaching adequate serum concentrations is available, a switch to oral antibacterials can be applied. Although available evidence has reduced the timing of the oral switch in bacteremia to three days/until clinical improvement, there are only scarce data regarding less than 10-day intravenous antibiotic therapy in endocarditis. Many standard or studied oral antimicrobial dosages are smaller than the approved doses for parenteral administration, which is a risk factor for treatment failure; in addition, the gastrointestinal barrier may affect drug bioavailability, especially when the causative pathogen has a minimum inhibitory concentration that is close to the susceptibility breakpoint. A considerable number of patients infected by such near-breakpoint strains may not be potential candidates for oral step-down therapy to non-highly bioavailable antibiotics like beta-lactams; different breakpoints should be determined for this setting. This review will focus on summarizing findings about pathogen-specific tailoring of oral step-down therapy for bacteremia and endocarditis, but will also present laboratory and clinical data about antibiotics such as beta-lactams, linezolid, and fosfomycin that should be studied more in order to elucidate their role and optimal dosage in this context.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- electronic health record
- escherichia coli
- newly diagnosed
- big data
- gram negative
- candida albicans
- staphylococcus aureus
- multidrug resistant
- machine learning
- case report
- ejection fraction
- low dose
- high dose
- peritoneal dialysis
- climate change
- quality improvement
- combination therapy
- adverse drug