Fluconazole prophylaxis prevents intra-abdominal candidiasis in high-risk surgical patients
- 1 June 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 27 (6) , 1066-1072
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00003246-199906000-00019
Abstract
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of intravenous fluconazole for the prevention of intra-abdominal Candida infections in high-risk surgical patients. Randomized, prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Two university-affiliated hospitals in Switzerland. Forty-nine surgical patients with recurrent gastrointestinal perforations or anastomotic leakages. Prophylaxis with intravenous fluconazole (400 mg per day) or placebo continued until resolution of the underlying surgical condition. Patients were evaluated daily, and specimens for culture were obtained three times per week during prophylaxis. The primary study end points were the frequency of and the time to intra-abdominal Candida infections. Secondary end points were the frequency of candidiasis (intraabdominal and extra-abdominal) and the emergence or persistence of Candida colonization. Among patients who were not colonized at study entry, Candida was isolated from surveillance cultures during prophylaxis in 15% of the patients in the fluconazole group and in 62% of the patients in the placebo group (relative risk, 0.25; 95% confidence interval, 0.07 to 0.96; p = .04). Candida peritonitis occurred in one of 23 patients (4%) who received fluconazole and in seven of 20 patients (35%) who received placebo (relative risk, 0.12; 95% confidence interval, 0.02 to 0.93; p = .02). In addition, one catheter-related Candida albicans sepsis occurred in a fluconazole-treated patient. Thus, overall, candidiasis developed in two fluconazole patients and seven placebo patients (relative risk, 0.25; 95% confidence interval, 0.06 to 1.06; p = .06). C. albicans accounted for 87% of the Candida species isolated before or during prophylaxis, and all C. albicans strains were susceptible to fluconazole. Fluconazole was well tolerated, and adverse events occurred at similar frequencies in both treatment groups. Fluconazole prophylaxis prevents colonization and invasive intra-abdominal Candida infections in high-risk surgical patients. (Crit Care Med 1999; 27:1066-1072)Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tertiary Peritonitis: Clinical Features of a Complex Nosocomial InfectionWorld Journal of Surgery, 1998
- International Conference for the Development of a Consensus on the Management and Prevention of Severe Candidal InfectionsClinical Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Microbiological Factors Influencing the Outcome of Nosocomial Bloodstream Infections: A 6‐Year Validated, Population‐Based ModelClinical Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Development of Interpretive Breakpoints for Antifungal Susceptibility Testing: Conceptual Framework and Analysis of In Vitro-In Vivo Correlation Data for Fluconazole, Itraconazole, and Candida InfectionsClinical Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Correlation between in vitro susceptibility ofCandida albicans and fluconazole-resistant oropharyngeal candidiasis in HIV-infected patientsEuropean Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, 1993
- Comparative study of the efficacy of fluconazole versus amphotericin B/flucytosine in surgical patients with systemic mycosesInfection, 1993
- Secular trends in nosocomial primary bloodstream infections in the United States, 1980–1989The American Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Hospital-Acquired CandidemiaArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1988
- Candida Infections in Surgical PatientsAnnals of Surgery, 1983
- Candida peritonitisThe American Journal of Medicine, 1976