Institute of Liver and Digestive Health, University College London, London, UK.
Glasgow Royal Infirmary, Glasgow, UK.
Am J Gastroenterol. 2023 Jan 1;118(1):105-113. doi: 10.14309/ajg.0000000000001937. Epub 2022 Aug 12.
Hospital-acquired infections (HAI) are common in cirrhosis with antibiotics frequently used to prevent infections, but their efficacy for this role is unknown. To investigate this, we used Albumin to Prevent Infection in Chronic Liver Failure (ATTIRE) data to evaluate whether antibiotic use in patients without infection prevented HAI.
In ATTIRE patients without infection at baseline grouped by antibiotic prescription or not, we studied HAI during trial treatment period and mortality, with propensity score matching to account for differences in disease severity.
Two hundred three of 408 patients prescribed antibiotics at enrollment did not have infection and they were more unwell than noninfected patients not given antibiotics. There were no differences in subsequent HAI comparing antibiotic treated (39/203, 19.2%) to nonantibiotic treated (73/360, 20.3%; P = 0.83). Twenty-eight-day mortality was higher in antibiotic-treated patients ( P = 0.004) likely reflecting increased disease severity. Matching groups using propensity scoring revealed no differences in HAI or mortality. In noninfected patients at enrollment treated with/without rifaximin, there were no differences in HAI ( P = 0.16) or mortality, confirmed with propensity matching. Patients given long-term antibiotic prophylaxis at discharge had no differences in 6-month mortality compared with nonantibiotic patients, although antibiotic-treated patients had more infections at trial entry, with numbers too small for matching.
Half of antibiotics at study entry were given to patients without an infection diagnosis which did not reduce the overall risk of HAI or improve mortality. This supports prompt de-escalation or discontinuation of antibiotics guided by culture sensitivities at 24-48 hours after commencement if no infection and the patient is improving.
医院获得性感染(HAI)在肝硬化中很常见,常使用抗生素预防感染,但抗生素在预防感染方面的效果尚不清楚。为了研究这一问题,我们使用了 Albumin to Prevent Infection in Chronic Liver Failure (ATTIRE) 数据,以评估无感染患者使用抗生素是否能预防 HAI。
在无感染的 ATTIRE 患者中,根据抗生素处方与否进行分组,我们研究了试验治疗期间的 HAI 和死亡率,并采用倾向评分匹配来考虑疾病严重程度的差异。
在入组时开了抗生素的 408 名患者中有 203 名没有感染,他们的病情比没有开抗生素的非感染患者更严重。比较抗生素治疗组(39/203,19.2%)和非抗生素治疗组(73/360,20.3%;P=0.83),随后的 HAI 发生率没有差异。抗生素治疗组的 28 天死亡率更高(P=0.004),可能反映了疾病严重程度的增加。使用倾向评分匹配两组后,HAI 或死亡率无差异。在入组时无感染且接受利福昔明治疗/未接受利福昔明治疗的患者中,HAI(P=0.16)或死亡率无差异,倾向评分匹配也证实了这一点。与未接受抗生素治疗的患者相比,出院时接受长期抗生素预防治疗的患者在 6 个月时的死亡率没有差异,尽管抗生素治疗组在试验开始时的感染更多,但由于数量太少,无法进行匹配。
一半的抗生素是在没有感染诊断的情况下给患者使用的,但这并没有降低 HAI 的总体风险或提高死亡率。这支持在开始治疗后 24-48 小时,如果没有感染且患者在好转,根据培养敏感性迅速降级或停止抗生素治疗。