Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, Guangdong Key Laboratory of Molecular Epidemiology, Guangdong Pharmaceutical University, Guangzhou, China.
PLoS One. 2013 Nov 18;8(11):e79782. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079782. eCollection 2013.
To evaluate whether teicoplanin could be an alternative to vancomycin for treatment of MRSA infection in Chinese population using a meta-analysis in randomized controlled trials.
THE FOLLOWING DATABASES WERE SEARCHED: Chinese Biomedical Literature database (CBM), Chinese Journal Full-text database (CNKI), Wanfang database, Medline database, Ovid database and Cochrane Library. Articles published from 2002 to 2013 that studied teicoplanin in comparison to vancomycin in the treatment of MRSA infected patients were collected. Overall effects, publishing bias analysis and sensitivity analysis on clinical cure rate, microbiologic eradication rate and adverse events rate were performed by using Review Manager 5.2 and Stata 11.0 softwares.
Twelve articles met entry criteria. There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups regarding the clinical cure rate (risk ratio [RR], teicoplanin vs vancomycin, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.741.19; P=0.60), microbiological cure rate (risk ratio [RR], teicoplanin vs vancomycin, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.911.07; P=0.74) and adverse event rate (risk ratio [RR], teicoplanin vs vancomycin, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.40~1.84; P=0.70).
The meta-analysis results indicate that the two therapies are similar in both efficacy and safety, thus teicoplanin can act as an effective alternative to vancomycin for treating patients infected by MRSA.
采用荟萃分析评价替考拉宁治疗中国人群耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(MRSA)感染的疗效,为临床应用提供参考。
计算机检索中国生物医学文献数据库(CBM)、中国期刊全文数据库(CNKI)、万方数据库、PubMed、Ovid 数据库和 Cochrane 图书馆,搜集 2002 年至 2013 年发表的比较替考拉宁与万古霉素治疗 MRSA 感染的随机对照试验,采用 Review Manager 5.2 软件和 Stata 11.0 软件进行荟萃分析。
共纳入 12 篇文献,Meta 分析结果显示,两组临床治愈率[风险比(RR)=0.94,95%CI(0.741.19),P=0.60]、微生物学清除率[RR=0.99,95%CI(0.911.07),P=0.74]及不良反应发生率[RR=0.86,95%CI(0.40~1.84),P=0.70]差异均无统计学意义。
现有证据表明,替考拉宁与万古霉素治疗 MRSA 感染的疗效与安全性相当,可作为治疗 MRSA 感染的一种有效选择。