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| Abstract |
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The evolving etiology of infections in this patient population is reviewed by Dr. Donowitz. Presently accepted antibiotic regimens and practices are discussed, along with ongoing controversies.
In Section II, Drs. Maki and Crnich discuss line-related infection, which is a major infectious source in the neutropenic. Defining true line-related bloodstream infection remains a challenge despite the fact that various methods to do so exist. Means of prevention of line related infection, diagnosis, and therapy are reviewed.
Fungal infection continues to perplex the infectious disease clinician and hematologist/oncologist. Diagnosis is difficult, and many fungal infections will lead to increased mortality even with rapid diagnosis and therapy. In Section III, Dr. Pappas reviews the major fungal etiologies of infection in the neutropenic patient and the new anti-fungals that are available to treat them.
Finally, Dr. Rolston reviews the possibility of outpatient management of neutropenic fever. Recognizing that neutropenics represent a heterogeneous group of patients, identification of who can be treated as an outpatient and with what antibiotics are discussed.
| I. Infections in the Neutropenic Patient: An Overview |
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Infection in the compromised host has been a topic of clinical concern, research and discussion for over three decades. Our understanding of risk factors for infection, means of diagnosis, and therapeutic options has increased greatly during this period of time. However, the increasing numbers of patients who are immunocompromised, the changing epidemiology of infection, and the growing resistance of bacteria to commonly used antimicrobial agents has made this problem one of the most persistent in infectious disease, hematology-oncology and general internal medicine.
Neutropenia and the Immunocompromised State
The compromised state occurs when any of the host's major defense systems are undermined in a manner that increases the chance of infection.1 Host defenses can be undermined by the underlying disease (myeloma, lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia), specific therapy of the underlying disease (steroids, cytotoxic chemotherapy) or an array of iatrogenic manipulations that occur when a patient is hospitalized (exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics as prophylaxis or therapy, use of long-dwelling right-atrial catheters, exposure to hospital pathogens). As a rule, a variety of host defense defects will occur in patients with malignancy undergoing chemotherapy that will predispose them to infection. Neutropenia remains the major defect for many patients and therefore continues to serve as a model system for dealing with infections in patients who are immunocompromised.
The role of neutropenia as a major host defense defect was defined by Bodey in 1966 when he demonstrated that as the absolute neutrophil count dropped below 500-1000/mm3, the incidence of severe infection, the number of days spent on antibiotics, and the number of days of fever increased.2 The incidence of infection was 14% if the neutrophil count fell below 500-1000/mm3, and 24-60% if the neutrophil count fell to < 100/mm3. The longer the duration of neutropenia and the more rapid the decline in white cells, the greater the incidence of infection.2,3 If the granulocytopenia was prolonged for more than 5 weeks, then the incidence of infection was 100%. Neutrophil counts less than 500 cells/mm3 for greater than 10 days is now viewed as a general threshold for more frequent and severe infections.2,4
While neutropenia remains of critical importance in establishing the risk of infection, it is only one of the risks. It is now clear that patients with neutropenia represent a heterogeneous population with varying rates of infection-related morbidity and mortality.5 As discussed in Section IV, additional parameters help define the true risk of infection, as well as the mortality, and therefore help determine the possibility for inpatient versus outpatient therapy with oral versus parenteral antibiotics.
The relationship of host defense defects and infection risk is in continual flux (Figure 1
). As new chemotherapy regimens are developed, and as new antibiotics are introduced for prophylaxis or therapy, new infection risks have been defined. Use of the newer purine analogs such as fludarabine in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia resulted in increased infection with Listeria monocytogenes, Pneumocystis carinii, and other organisms associated with T-cell dysfunction.6,7 Prophylaxis with agents such as trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and ciprofloxacin in the setting of severe mucositis has been associated with bacteremia with streptococcus viridans species.8,9 Thus each new chemotherapeutic regimen or new antibiotic must be evaluated and monitored for its long-term effect on infection.
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In the mid 1980s, the spectrum of bacteria causing infection began to change. A steady increase in gram-positive infections occurred until presently 60-70% of bacteremias with a single organism identified will be caused by gram-positive cocci.11,12 Coagulase-negative staphylococci and S. aureus are the predominant organisms. Why this change from gram-negative to gram-positive organisms occurred is not absolutely clear, and is probably multifactorial. Important considerations include aggressive chemotherapeutic regimens that cause more severe mucositis, longer durations of neutropenia, almost uniform use of long-dwelling right-atrial catheters, use of H2 antagonists, and use of prophylactic antibacterial agents with relatively weak coverage of gram-positive organisms.13
In addition to the change from gram-negative infections to those caused by gram-positive organisms, "new" gram-positive organisms have become important etiologies of infection (Table 1
).11,14 Several organisms deserve special emphasis.
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The enterococcus is becoming a more common agent colonizing and infecting neutropenic patients, mirroring its emerging role as a nosocomial pathogen in general. Of these organisms, E. faecium is overtaking E. faecealis as the predominant organism. As has occurred in other hospital settings, vancomycin-resistant enterococci have been involved in outbreaks.18,19 Even in neutropenics, colonization is a more frequent occurrence than true infection. However, in the setting of neutropenia, bacteremia with vancomycin-resistant enterococci may be associated with a mortality rate of over 70%.
The other organisms listed in Table 1
account for
5% of all isolates in febrile neutropenics. Their potential for causing severe infection and their variable susceptibility to commonly used antibiotics needs to be recognized. One of the more challenging areas in the febrile neutropenic is the question of diagnosis and therapy of line-related infection. While gram-positive organisms predominate, an array of bacteria and fungi may be involved. This topic will be reviewed in Section II.
A variety of previously unappreciated gram-negative organisms have also been identified as causes of infection in the neutropenic patient. Among these isolates include Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Legionella species, Alcaligenes xylosoxidans, and Burkholderia cepacia.11
Also important is the increasing resistance of more common aerobic gram-negative bacilli to the antibiotic "standards" that have been utilized over the last decade.20 Resistance of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to third-generation cephalosporins is 9-12%, to imipenem is 8.3%, and to ciprofloxacin is 13.3%. Enterobacter species have resistance rates of 10-21% to ceftazidime and piperacillin/tazobactam.20 Resistance of gram-negative bacilli to ciprofloxacin has increased at some centers to over 25%, especially where the agent has been used for prophylaxis.20
Empiric Therapy of Fever in the Neutropenic Patient: Suggestions, Not Rules
In the setting of changing flora and susceptibility patterns to antibiotics, guidelines as to "best therapy" of infection in the neutropenic patient must be evaluated on the basis of local patterns of infection and local and regional resistance patterns.
The approach to therapy of the febrile neutropenic patient has evolved slowly over the last thirty years in several distinct stages. The first stage stemmed from the work of Schimpff in 1971 determining that empiric antibiotic therapy was required and that combinations of antibiotics lead to reasonable outcomes.10 The next stage began with the introduction of third-generation cephalosporins with potent activity against aerobic gram-negative bacilli including P. aeruginosa and carbapenems, which allowed monotherapy to be considered. The present stage involves the consideration of antibacterial resistance patterns prior to the use of any empiric therapy. Since these stages overlap, each needs to be considered.
Aminoglycosides and anti-pseudomonas penicillins became established therapy for neutropenic fever in 1971, with overall response rates between 60-70%. For the next decade a variety of studies utilized various aminoglycosides (gentamicin, amikacin, tobramycin, netilmicin) as well as various anti-pseudomonas penicillins (ticarcillin, piperacillin, mezlocillin) and somewhat later, ß-lactam/ß-lactamase inhibitor combinations (ticarcillin-clavulanic acid, piperacillin-tazobactam). Despite differences in in vitro susceptibility testing, there has never been a clear or consistent predominance of one combination versus any other. In general, the potential advantages of combination chemotherapy over monotherapy include potential synergy against strains of aerobic gram-negative bacilli, activity against anaerobes especially when ß-lactam/ß-lactamase inhibitor combinations are used, and a possible decrease in the emergence of resistant strains. While none of these regimens are "first-line" therapy against gram-positive cocci, they may be adequate to stabilize the patient until specific gram-positive etiologies are identified. The major drawback of combination therapy is the oto- and nephrotoxicity of aminoglycosides, which require monitoring of serum levels and careful dose adjustment. Single daily dosing of aminoglycoside has been utilized in the neutropenic population, but it remains unclear whether this means of dosing is as effective and less toxic than the more standard dosing interval. Recently, ciprofloxacin has been shown to be equivalent to tobramycin as part of combination therapy with piperacillin, with fewer clear episodes of drug-related nephrotoxicity noted in the ciprofloxacin group.21 With the development of aztreonam, a monobactam with potent coverage against aerobic gram-negative bacilli but no coverage of gram-positive cocci, therapy with azeotronam plus clindamycin or vancomycin was added to the possible combination regimens for use in the febrile neutropenic with particular usefulness in the penicillin-allergic patient.
In the 1980s as third-generation cephalosporins and carbapenems became available, renewed interest in monotherapy, or at least modified monotherapy, developed. The anti-pseudomonas third-generation cephalosporins (ceftazidime, cefepime) and carbapenems (imipenem, meropenem) all have potent activity against aerobic gram-negative-bacilli including P. aeruginosa, and had at least some activity against many strains of gram-positive cocci. Ceftazidime received earliest attention both as monotherapy as well as in combination with short- or long-term aminoglycoside. While overall efficacy of ceftazidime monotherapy was comparable to combination therapy, patients with documented infection with gram-negative bacilli did better when an aminoglycoside was used along with it.23,24 The concept of modified monotherapy or "front-loaded" therapy was therefore established using an aminoglycoside for the first 72 hours of therapy, then discontinuing it if initial cultures were negative for aerobic gram-negative bacilli. This was thought to provide broad initial coverage but would not expose patients to aminoglycosides unless it was really needed. While the initial work was done with ceftazidime, cefepime has been used in the same way. Both agents have been used as pure monotherapy as well.
The carbapenems presently available, imipenem and meropenem, have been clearly demonstrated to be excellent agents used as monotherapy. Unlike ceftazidime, where aminoglycosides improved outcomes in the setting of documented gram-negative infection, no such effect was noted with imipenem.24 With similar activity and penetration, meropenem also has been used as monotherapy. Ciprofloxacin, as well as other quinolones, have recently been studied as potential monotherapeutic agents.25,26 The data for quinolones remains somewhat limited and the data should be viewed as suggestive only.
Large, well-designed, blinded, randomized, controlled trials have not been carried out to compare third-generation cephalosporins to each other or to compare carbapenems to each other. Studies carefully examining whether anything is to be gained by adding a second antibiotic to a monotherapeutic regimen are rare. In general, each of the agents mentioned is probably adequate as initial empiric therapy. Should microbiologic confirmation of infection occur, adjustment of the regimen can be done safely without risk to the patient as long as broad-spectrum coverage is maintained. Which antibiotic or antibiotic combination to use should be determined by local susceptibility patterns and local frequencies of various pathogens.
Ongoing controversies persist concerning various aspects of antibiotic therapy of the compromised host. Some of these include:
1. Should vancomycin be utilized as part of the initial regimen?
Clearly, the predominance of gram-positive cocci as the etiologic agents of microbiologically proven infection in this population would suggest the use of vancomycin especially in an era of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), coagulase-negative staphylococci, enterococci and viridans streptococci. Definitive data, however, is lacking. Some studies have shown that vancomycin when used initially may be associated with fewer break-through bacteremias and local infections with S. aureus.27,28 Subsequent studies suggested that there was no increase in morbidity or mortality overall if vancomycin was held until it was needed, that is, until a gram-positive organism was identified and the patient was not responding to the initial regimen.29,30 A significant exception is bacteremia with viridans streptococci, which may have a higher mortality if not initially treated with vancomycin.8
Overall, the general consensus concerning vancomycin is that there is no clear indication for its use as initial empiric therapy unless the patient is known to be colonized with MRSA, is at an institution where fulminant gram-positive infections are frequent, or is at an institution where infection with viridans streptococci are frequent or suspected. If vancomycin is used but no gram-positive infections are identified after appropriate culturing at 48-72 hours, vancomycin should be discontinued.4 If cultures are positive for gram-positive organisms from initial cultures and the patient is not doing well on the initial antibiotic regimen, vancomycin could be added until the final antibiotic susceptibilities are established.4
2. How long does it take for antibiotics to work?
In reviewing results in over 480 episodes of febrile neutropenia, Elting et al observed that the median time to clinical response was 5-7 days.31 However, the time to response differed with the specific antibiotics being used, with some agents leading to a consistent response within 3 days. It would seem reasonable that antibiotic changes should not be carried out during the initial 3-7 days of therapy unless the patient's clinical status deteriorates. The "juggling" of antibiotics during this time otherwise does not appear helpful or supported by any literature.
3. If the patient responds, how long should therapy be continued?
The majority of patients with febrile neutropenia will not have a microbiologically documented infection. Therefore, duration of therapy will not be guided by monitoring sterilization of cultures or by the presence of a specific organism. Based on data by Pizzo et al, some would argue that therapy until neutropenia resolved (neutrophil count
300-500/mm3) is warranted.32 The relatively small number of patients examined in the study does not allow a definitive answer to be derived. Others would argue that either 10-14 days of therapy, therapy for a minimum of 7 days, or until cultures are cleared and the signs and symptom of infection resolve is adequate independent of the circulating neutrophil count.4 Discontinuation of antibiotics prior to resolution of neutropenia has been suggested only if patients are stable, have intact mucous membranes and skin, and are not scheduled for further chemotherapy or invasive procedures.4 Arguments for defined periods of therapy in the setting of neutropenia include: the association of prolonged antibiotic therapy with development of fungal infection, development of antimicrobial resistance, and drug-related toxicities.
A further point of debate is whether parenteral therapy should be utilized for the total duration of therapy; whether an early switch to oral therapy is reasonable; or whether total oral therapy is possible. The utility of outpatient antibiotic therapy is discussed in Section IV. For those patients whose neutropenia is expected to be prolonged (>14 days) and profound (neutrophil count < 100 cells/mm3) parenteral therapy seems reasonable. Though strong data are lacking, it has been suggested that if there is not clear infection noted, no positive cultures, and the patient is stable, parenteral therapy can be changed to oral therapy after 2 or more days for completion of a course. Antibiotic therapy with ciprofloxacin and amoxicillin/clavulanic or cefixime alone has been suggested as "reasonable" oral agents for "follow-up" therapy.3336 That most of the studies using oral agents were done in low risk patients suggests a note of caution when intravenous therapy is switched to oral therapy.
4 . What happens when the patient does not respond to empiric antibiotics after 3-5 days?
This probably represents the most worrisome of scenarios. The lack of response may be due to an array of possibilities including (i) a non-bacterial pathogen, (ii) an organism that is resistant at least in part to the antibiotic regimen being used, (iii) a new superinfection, (iv) an infection at a difficult to treat site (an abscess or a catheter infection) or (v) lower than expected serum or tissue levels of the antibiotic.4 Drug fever, and a number of other non-infectious possibilities such as atelectasis, pulmonary embolism, and phlebitis are also possible. Repeat history and physical examination as well as use of computerized tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) imaging are important considerations. If a detailed review of the patient reveals no new findings, then one or two interventions are usually used. The first is the addition of vancomycin if it was not part of the initial regimen. The thought is that gram-positive organisms are the most likely possibility and vancomycin is probably the best agent. If vancomycin is added but there is no clear response or no isolation of a gram-positive organism, vancomycin should then be discontinued.
The second choice is the addition of amphotericin or a comparable anti-fungal. As will be discussed In Section III, since we do poorly at diagnosing fungal infections and since neutropenia and exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics are major predisposing factors for fungal infection, this is a reasonable intervention. Historically, approximately 66% of patients will respond to amphotericin in this setting.37 If a fungal infection is found, the duration of antifungal therapy will depend on the organism. More likely, however, the patient will respond without a documented fungal infection detected. The duration of therapy in this case is not clearly defined. Treatment until neutropenia resolves or at least 2 weeks of therapy are commonly followed procedures.
Use of Adjunctive Therapy in Febrile Neutropenia: Logic, but no Definitive Data
Use of hematopoietic growth factors in neutropenic patients with fever would seem like a logical adjunct to antibiotics. However, in the randomized controlled trials using either G-CSF or GM-CSF, no clear or definitive reduction in morbidity and mortality has occurred.3840 Patients with profound, prolonged neutropenia with documented infection have been identified as a subgroup of patients that may benefit from use of growth factors. With even fewer supportive data, some experts would also use growth factors for patients who are not improving from severe infections despite appropriate antibiotic therapy.
Similarly, data concerning transfusions of white blood cells in febrile neutropenic patients has not yielded definitive results. While early studies suggested a beneficial effect, the studies were uncontrolled, dealt with a variety of underlying diseases, type of infections and dosing of white cells.41 More recent studies have still dealt with low numbers of patients though a beneficial effect was noted.42 The overall conclusion appears to be that neutrophil transfusions remains an experimental intervention.43 If used, they should be part of experimental protocols.
Conclusion
Overall, despite the array of complicating factors including drug resistance and new patterns of infection, rates of successful therapy of neutropenic fever have been maintained at 66-80% with differences in rates being more dependent on study design than antimicrobial agents used. With more rational use of antibiotics, and new antibiotics being developed that may begin to address presently difficult-to-treat organisms, there is at last an expectation of improving the present rates of successful therapy in this population.
| II. Line Sepsis in the Granulocytopenic Patient: Prevention, Diagnosis, and Management |
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Reliable vascular access is one of the most essential features of modern medical care, especially in the hospitalized granulocytopenic patient requiring blood products and multiple drugs. Unfortunately, the intravascular devices (IVDs) needed to establish reliable access are associated with significant potential for producing iatrogenic bacteremia or candidemia.1 More than 250,000 IVD-related bloodstream infections (IVDR BSIs) occur in the US each year,1 each associated with 12-25% attributable mortality2,3 prolongation of hospital stay3,4 and an added cost to healthcare of $33,000-35,000.3,4
Nature of the Problem
Prospective studies show that every type of IVD carries some risk of causing BSI. The magnitude of risk varies greatly, depending on the type of device (Table 2
).5 Historically this risk has been expressed as BSIs per 100 devices; however, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now recommends that rates of IVDR BSI be expressed per 1000 IVD-days. This recommendation is logical because it takes into account widely varying risks of IVDR BSI over time for different types of IVDs; in general, although rates of IVDR BSI per 100 IVDs are usually higher with long-term devices, the risk per 1000 IVD-days is usually considerably lower (Table 2
).
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Pathogenesis of IVDR BSI
There are two major sources of IVDR BSI: 1) colonization of the IVD, catheter-related infection, and 2) contamination of the fluid administered through the device, infusate-related infection.1 Contaminated infusate is the cause of most epidemic IVDR BSIs. In contrast, catheter-related infections are responsible for most endemic IVDR BSIs.
In order for microorganisms to cause catheter-related infection they must first gain access to the extraluminal or intraluminal surface of the device where they can adhere and become incorporated into a biofilm that allows sustained infection and hematogenous dissemination.1 Microorganisms gain access by one of three mechanisms (Figure 2
): skin organisms invade the percutaneous tract, probably facilitated by capillary action, at the time of insertion or in the days following; microorganisms contaminate the catheter hub (and lumen) when the catheter is inserted over a percutaneous guidewire or later manipulated; or organisms are carried hematogenously to the implanted IVD from remote sources of local infection, such as a pneumonia.
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Microorganisms found on patient's skin, which gain access to the IVD mainly extraluminally and occasionally intraluminallycoagulase-negative staphylococci (39%), S. aureus (26%), and Candida species (11%)account for 76% of IVD-related BSIs with short-term, non-cuffed devices of all types; only 14% are caused by gram-negative bacilli. In contrast, with long-term IVDs, coagulase-negative staphylococci (25%) and gram-negative bacilli (45%), which most often have gained access intraluminally and contaminate infusate in the device, account for 76% of IVD-related BSIs; only 2% are caused by Candida species.5
Prevention of IVDR BSI
Over the past decade many investigators have evaluated strategies for the prevention of IVDR BSI, with greater success achieved than with any other form of nosocomial infection.1,8,9 Guidelines for the prevention of IVDR BSI were last issued by the Hospital Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee (HICPAC) in 1996 and recently have been revised (Table 3
).10 Wide implementation of these measures has resulted in a substantial decline in hospital-acquired primary BSIs (Figure 3
).11 More consistent application of control measures and wider acceptance of novel technologies shown to be effective (and cost-effective)8,9 will be needed to reduce this rate further.
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Innovative IVD design
Subcutaneous cuffs for long-term CVCs.
Hickman and Broviac catheters incorporate a subcutaneous Dacron® cuff which becomes ingrown by host tissue, creating a mechanical barrier against invasion of the tract by skin organisms. Rates of BSI per 1000 days with these catheters are far lower than with short-term percutaneously-inserted, non-cuffed CVCs inserted in the ICU (Table 1
),1,5 and can be considered a quantum advance for safer long-term vascular access.
Subcutaneous central venous ports.
Surgically-implanted subcutaneous central venous ports, which can be accessed intermittently with a steel needle, have been associated with the lowest rates of IVDR BSI (Table 2
). A prospective observational study of Hickman catheters and central ports in oncology patients showed that for patients needing intermittent central access, ports appear to safer as regards the risk of IVDR BSI.15
Peripherally-inserted central catheters (PICCs).
Studies also suggest that PICCs pose substantially lower risks of IVDR BSI than standard non-tunneled, non-cuffed CVCs (Table 2
),5,16 perhaps because of less dense bacterial colonization on the arm as compared to the neck or upper chest.1
Antibiotic lock solutions
Prophylactic use of systemic antibiotics at the time of IVD implantation has not proven effective in reducing the incidence of IVDR BSI and is strongly discouraged.10 However, studies of continuous infusion of vancomycin, incorporated into total parenteral nutrition admixtures, have shown reduced rates of coagulase-negative staphylococcal BSI in low-birth-weight infants.17 Unfortunately, this form of prophylaxis results in prolonged low blood levels of vancomycin, which may be conducive to promoting resistance.
The "antibiotic lock" is a novel technique of local prophylaxis: an antibiotic solution is instilled into the catheter lumen and allowed to dwell for a defined period of time, usually 6-12 hours, after which it is removed. There have been 6 prospective randomized trials of antibiotic lock solutions for the prevention of BSI with long-term IVDs.18 The largest and most recent trial by Henrickson et al19 randomized 126 pediatric oncology patients (36,944 IVD-days) who had recently had a tunneled CVC implanted to 3 prophylactic lock regimens: heparin (10 U/mL) (control); heparin and vancomycin (25 µg/mL); and heparin, vancomycin and ciprofloxacin (2 µg/mL). Use of the vancomycin-ciprofloxacin-containing lock solution was associated with a markedly reduced rate of IVDR infection, compared to heparin alone (0.55 versus 1.72 per 1000 IVD-days, p = 0.005). Similarly, the rate of infection with vancomycin-containing lock solution was significantly reduced (0.37 per 1000 IVD-days, p = 0.004). The two antimicrobial lock solutions showed comparable protection against gram-positive and gram-negative IVDR infection. Unfortunately, failure to separate local infections from BSIs in the final data limits analysis of the results of this study. While rates of nosocomial colonization or infection with vancomycin-resistant enterococci, as detected by clinical cultures, were comparable in the three groups, no effort was made to proactively assess the impact of antibiotic-containing lock solutions on nosocomial colonization by vancomycin-resistant enterococci, methicillin-resistant S. aureus, and fluoroquinolone-resistant gram-negative bacilli.
Most studies utilized a lock solution containing vancomycin. It seems unlikely that microorganisms in the exposed patient's flora could develop resistance to vancomycin from the minute quantities of drug in a catheter lumen (< 15 µg), yet there is just concern over the possible effect of wide prophylactic use of vancomycin lock solutions, and more data are needed before their routine use can be recommended, specifically, randomized studies that prospectively assess the impact on nosocomial colonization by resistant microorganisms. However, because antibiotic lock solutions clearly reduce the risk of IVDR BSI with long-term IVDs, the new HICPAC Guideline considers their use acceptable in individual cases where a patient who requires indefinite vascular access continues to experience IVDR BSIs despite compliance with infection control guidelines.10
Prophylactic thrombolysis
Prophylactic anticoagulation, including mini-dose heparin and warfarin,20 has been shown to reduce catheter thrombosis with CVCs in randomized trials, but the effect on IVDR infection has not been reported. Randomized trials of prophylactic installation of urokinase (5000 IU/mL) into long-term IVDs every 1-2 or every 3-4 weeks have shown a reduced incidence of thrombosis and premature IVD loss.21,22 One trial also showed a reduction in IVDR BSIs.21 Prophylactic thrombolysis was well tolerated but the cost-benefit of this novel but expensive practice needs to be determined.
Management of Line Sepsis
Recognition of IVDR sepsis
It is essential to have a high index of suspicion of infection in the granulocytopenic patient who presents with fever or nonspecific signs, such as tachycardia, tachypnea or hypotension, signs of the systemic inflammatory syndrome. In the granulocytopenic patient, fever reflects infection more than half of the time.23,24 Yet, profoundly granulocytopenic patients often do not exhibit characteristic findings of local infection on examination.25
Clinical manifestations of underlying diseases and the various forms of therapy given to the patient, such as blood products, cytotoxic drugs or enteral feeding, can produce fever, diarrhea, respiratory distress or erythroderma, mimicking infection. Drug fever is a relatively common cause of pyrexia in the hospitalized patient and, contrary to popular dogma, is not associated in most cases with a rash or eosinophilia or a prior history of atopy and can present hours, days, or even weeks after starting the culpable agent, but averages 21 days.26 Most patients will defervesce within 24-48 hours after discontinuation of the drug. The agents most commonly implicated in drug fever are the anti-infectives, especially the ß-lactams; all of the antineoplastic agents; and the lupogenic drugs, INH, methyldopa, procainamide, quinidine, hydralazine and phenytoin.
Despite the challenge in identifying the source of a granulocytopenic patient's signs of sepsis,27 several clinical, epidemiologic, and microbiologic findings point strongly towards an IVD as the source of a septic episode (Table 4
):1,28 patients with abrupt onset of signs and symptoms of sepsis without any other identifiable source should prompt suspicion of infection of an IVD; the presence of inflammation, with or without purulence, at the IVD insertion site, while present in the minority of cases, when combined with signs and symptoms of sepsis has been shown to be predictive of IVDR bacteremia and should prompt removal of the IVD; finally, recovery of certain microorganisms in multiple blood cultures, such as staphylococci, Corynebacterium or Bacillus species, Candida or Malassezia strongly suggests infection of the IVD.
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Recent evidence-based guidelines provide the best current information on the evaluation of the ICU patient with fever or other signs of sepsis.2729 Anti-infective drugs for suspected or presumed infection should never be started in the critically ill granulocytopenic patient without first obtaining blood cultures, at least one of which is drawn from a peripheral vein by percutaneous venipuncture. Granulocytopenic patients have a very high incidence of BSI.23,24 Studies have shown that obtaining more than two 10-15 mL blood cultures provides little additional yield, but it is essential in adults that an adequate total volume of blood is cultured, at least 20 mLideally 30 mLto maximize the detection of BSI.1
Standard blood cultures drawn through CVCs provide excellent sensitivity for diagnosis of BSI but are more likely to be contaminated,30,31 resulting in unnecessary or suboptimal antimicrobial therapy; isolated single positive blood cultures drawn through a CVC for coagulase-negative staphylococci reflect contaminants most of the time.31
Removal and culture of the IVD has historically been the gold standard for the diagnosis of IVDR BSI, particularly with short-term catheters.1,28 Studies have demonstrated the superiority of semiquantitative or quantitative catheter tip culture methods for the diagnosis of IVDR BSI.1 The diagnosis of IVDR BSI is completed when a colonized IVD is associated with concomitant BSI, with no other plausible source (i.e., CDC's primary BSI).28
Cultures of IVDs obviously require their removal, which is a major problem in patients with long-term IVDs. Prospective studies have shown that only 25-45% of episodes of sepsis in patients with long-term devices represent true IVDR BSI.32 Thus, it would seem that development of in situ methods for detecting IVDR BSI that do not require removal of the IVD would be of great value.
If a laboratory has available an automated quantitative system for culturing blood (e.g., Isolator® lysis-centrifugation system, Wampole Laboratories, Cranbury, NJ), quantitative blood cultures drawn through the IVD and concomitantly by venipuncture from a peripheral vein (or another IVD) can permit the diagnosis of IVDR bacteremia or fungemia to be made with sensitivity and specificity in the range of 80-95%,33,34 without removal of the catheter, if empiric antimicrobial therapy has not yet been initiated. With infected IVDs, the blood culture drawn through the IVD characteristically shows a 5- to 10-fold step-up in the concentration of organisms compared to the blood culture drawn peripherally. High-grade peripheral candidemia (
25 CFU/mL) reflects an infected IVD 90% of the time.33 Quantitative IVD-drawn blood cultures are most useful for diagnosis of infections with long-term devices.35 There is evidence that a single quantitative culture drawn from a long-term device, even without an accompanying peripheral culture, can accurately identify a IVDR BSI if there is > 100 CFU/mL of growth.
Quantitative blood cultures are labor intensive and cost almost twice as much as standard blood cultures. The wide availability of radiometric blood culture systems (e.g., BACTEC system®, Becton Dickinson), in which blood cultures are continuously monitored for microbial growth, has led to a clever application of this system for the detection of IVDR BSI: the differential-time-to-positivity (DTP) of blood cultures drawn through the IVD and concomitantly from a peripheral site. Detection of positivity in a blood culture drawn from the IVD more than 2 hours before positivity of the culture drawn from a peripheral site has been shown to be highly predictive of IVDR BSI, in one study with long-term catheters yielding an overall sensitivity of 94% and specificity of 91%.31
Another simple but rapid and potentially cost-effective method of detecting IVDR BSI is acridine-orange leucocyte cytospin (AOLC) staining combined with gram staining of a sample of lysed and centrifuged blood drawn from the suspected IVD. In a recent prospective study this method was found to be 96% sensitive and 92% specific.36 AOLC with gram stain will likely remain useful primarily for diagnosing BSIs with long-term IVDs.
Management of the device
Short-term IVDs. If a short-term vascular catheter is suspected of being infected because the patient has no obvious other source of infection to explain fever, there is inflammation at the insertion site, or cryptogenic staphylococcal bacteremia or candidemia has been documented, blood cultures should be obtained and the catheter should be removed and cultured. Failure to remove an infected catheter puts the patient at risk of developing septic thrombophlebitis with peripheral IV catheters, septic thrombosis of a great central vein with CVCs,37,38 or even endocarditis. Continued access, if necessary, can be established with a new catheter inserted in a new site. A new catheter should never be placed in an old site over a guidewire if the first catheter is suspected of being infected, especially if there is purulence at the site.
Long-term IVDs. BSI that might have originated from a cuffed and tunneled CVC does not automatically mandate removal of the device unless (Table 5
): there has been persistent exit site infection; the tunnel is obviously infected;39 there is evidence of complicating endocarditis, septic thrombosis, or septic pulmonary emboli,39 the infecting pathogen is S. aureus,40 Corynebacterium JK,41 a Bacillus species,42 Stenotrophomonas spp., Burkholdaria cepacia and all pseudomonal species,43,44 a filamentous fungus or Malassezia species,45 or a mycobacterial species;46 or bacteremia or candidemia persists for more than three days despite adequate therapy (Table 5
).39
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In addition to infusion of systemic antibiotics through the infected line, which we believe is mandatory for any patient with documented IVDR BSI, instillation of a highly concentrated solution of the antibiotic or antibiotic combination, "locked" into the infected tunneled catheter may be of adjunctive value to "cure" the infected IVD. In vitro testing has proven the long-term stability of solutions of most antimicrobial agents over periods of time as long as 10 days.57
In small, uncontrolled clinical trials, "antibiotic lock therapy" (ALT), usually in conjunction with systemic antibiotic therapy, "cure" rates of infected IVDs in excess of 90% have been reported.35,560 The vast majority of IVDs reported in these studies were infected with gram-positive organisms other than S. aureus and Bacillus sp.primarily coagulase-negative staphylococci and gram-negative bacilli other than P. aeruginosa. Data are lacking on the utility of ALT for fungal IVDR BSIs and therefore, at this time, ALT cannot be recommended for the management of long-term IVDs infected by S. aureus, Bacillus sp., Corynebacterium JK, Stenotrophomonas spp., B. cepacia, all pseudomonas species, fungi or mycobacterial species.
The use of thrombolytic agents, such as streptokinase or urokinase, has been advocated as adjunctive therapy for long-term IVDs that become infected but prospective randomized trials have failed to show demonstrable benefit.61
Historically, central ports have rarely proven to be curable with medical therapy alone if the device is clearly infected (e.g., an aspirate from the port shows heavy growth).6264 In vitro studies of antibiotic lock solutions in simulated models of central ports raise the possibility of using ALT to preserve the use of these long-term devices when they become infected. A recent study of patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) with central ports who developed IVDR BSIs found that ALT combined with systemic antibiotic therapy resulted in 70% of the ports being salvaged; however, long-term follow-up data was not reported. A recent large clinical study of ALT for central port infections achieved salvage rates less than 50%.65 Based on the marginal efficacy of ALT in these two studies and the historically poor cure rate achieved with systemic antibiotics alone, we believe definitive treatment of infected central ports mandates their removal.
Anti-infective therapy
In general the selection of an initial antimicrobial regimen for a septic patient is influenced by 1) whether the presumed infection was acquired in the community or is institutionally acquired, 2) the age of the patient, and 3) whether or not the patient is immunocompromised, especially granulocytopenic (< 1000 per mm3).
For the febrile granulocytopenic patient without an obvious local source of infection, an antipseudomonal penicillin or cephalosporin combined with an aminoglycoside or ciprofloxacin is yet widely used. However, monotherapy with ceftazidime,66 cefepime,67 or imipenem68 will provide reliable initial coverage, pending the results of cultures; each has been studied in randomized, comparative trials and been shown to provide efficacy comparable to combination regimens including an aminoglycoside. But if monotherapy is chosen and if cultures identify an infecting organism, it is essential that the regimen be adjusted for that organism, e.g., administer two bactericidal antibiotics of different classes shown to be effective against the organism if the bloodstream pathogen is a gram-negative rod, to provide additiveideally synergisticactivity, which appears to improve the outcome with severe granulocytopenia.69
There has been considerable controversy regarding the inclusion of vancomycin in the initial empiric regimen for the febrile granulocytopenic patient23,24 to provide a drug active against methicillin-resistant staphylococci, enterococci and Corynebacterium species. Comparative trials have shown that beginning with empiric vancomycin does reduce the frequency of secondary nosocomial BSI with these organisms during therapy;70,71 however, these studies have also shown that not including vancomycin in the initial regimen, but giving the drug only when a ß-lactamase-resistant gram-positive infection is identified, is not associated with increased morbidity or mortality, and the infection can be effectively treated.70,71 Thus, the routine use of vancomycin in the initial antimicrobial regimen for the febrile granulocytopenic patient is not recommended unless:72
-hemolytic viridans streptococcal bacteremia,73 e.g., shock with respiratory distress. In most cases, vancomycin can be reserved for microbiologically confirmed infections with coagulase-negative staphylococci or other resistant gram-positive organisms.
The decision to treat a suspected IVDR BSI before microbiologic confirmation, i.e. empirically, comes down to clinical judgment, weighing the evidence suggesting BSI and the risks of delayed treatment. In general, fever or other signs of sepsis in a granulocytopenic patient must be regarded as BSI, until proven otherwise.
If IVDR BSI is suspected (Table 5
), after cultures have been obtained, the combination of IV vancomycin (for staphylococci resistant to methicillin) with a fluoroquinolone, preferably ciprofloxacin or cefepime or imipenem/meropenem (for aerobic gram-negative bacilli), should prove effective against the bacterial pathogens most likely to be encountered. Initial therapy can then be modified based on the microbiologic identification and susceptibility of the infecting organisms.
How long to treat IVDR BSI will be influenced by whether the patient has underlying valvular heart disease, already has evidence of endocarditis or septic thrombosis, or shows evidence of metastatic infection. If endocarditis is suspected, transesophageal echocardiography offers superior sensitivity and discrimination for detecting vegetations, as compared with transthoracic echocardiography.74 In patients with high-grade bacteremia or fungemia, but without clinical or echocardiographic evidence of endocarditis, septic thrombosis should be suspected.37,38 Central venous thrombosis can now be diagnosed by venography,37,38 ultrasonography,75 MRI,76 or CT.7577
While there are no prospective data to guide the optimal duration of antimicrobial therapy for IVDR BSIs, most coagulase-negative staphylococcal infections can be cured with only 5 to 7 days of therapy,1,28,50,78 whereas most infections caused by other microorganisms can be adequately treated with 10 to 14 days of antimicrobial therapy.28,55,78,79 These recommendations hold only as long as there are no complications related to the infectionendocarditis, septic thrombophlebitis, septic thrombosis, or metastatic infection, such as osteomyelitisand the BSI clears within 72 hours of initiating therapy. Nosocomial enterococcal bacteremia deriving from an IVD is rarely associated with persistent endovascular infection, and unless there is clinical or echocardiographic evidence of endocarditis, treatment with IV ampicillin or vancomycin alone for 7 to 14 days should suffice.80
The management of S. aureus device-related infection deserves special mention, as there have been no prospective studies to evaluate the optimal duration of therapy for IVDR BSIs due to this organism. Historically, high rates of associated IE and late complications led to a universal policy of 4 to 6 weeks of antimicrobial therapy for all patients with S. aureus bacteremia. Earlier diagnosis and initiation of bactericidal therapy of nosocomial S. aureus BSIs in recent years has been associated with lower rates of IE and metastatic complications, prompting suggestions that short-course therapy (14 days) is effective and safe for most cases of IVDR S. aureus bacteremia, as long as the patient defervesces within 72 hours and there is no evidence of metastatic infection.79,81,82 In a study of routine transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) in 103 hospitalized patients with S. aureus bacteremia, 69 related to an IVD, Fowler et al found a surprisingly high rate of late complications: 23% with IVDR S. aureus BSI.74 In a more recent report, these authors have reported that the routine use of TEE with IVDR S. aureus BSI, as a means to stratify patients into short-course or long-course therapy, is cost effective. However, at this time there are no prospective studies to affirm this approach.83 Until more data are available, short-course for IVDR S. aureus bacteremia therapy should be approached with caution and only used when a TEE is unequivocally negative and the patient has defervesced within 72 hours of starting therapy.
IVDR septic thrombosis of a great central vein, which characteristically produces high-grade bacteremia or candidemia, can be reliably cured in most cases without surgical intervention, with 4 to 6 weeks of parenteral antimicrobial therapy in cases of bacterial infection37,38 and IV amphotericin B in a daily dose of 0.7 mg/kg and a total dose of approximately 20 mg/kg in cases of candidal infection.37 Unless there are contraindications, the patient should also be anticoagulated with heparin.37,38
All patients with IVDR candidemia should be treated, even if the patient becomes afebrile and blood cultures spontaneously revert to negative following removal of the catheter, without antifungal therapy.8486 IVDR candidemia that responds rapidly to removal of the catheter and institution of IV AmB can be reliably treated with a daily dose of 0.3 to 0.5 mg/kg and a total dose of 3-5 mg/kg.8486 Fluconazole (400 mg/d) has been shown to be as effective as AmB in randomized trials in non-neutropenic patients,87 and has further been shown to be comparable to AmB in observational studies of neutropenic patients with candidal IVDR BSIs88,89 but should not be used in IVDR BSIs associated with septic thrombosis and high-grade candidemia or with infections caused by fluconazole-resistant organisms, such as Candida krusei and C. glabrata.
All patients with a IVDR BSI must be monitored closely for at least six weeks after completing therapy, especially if they have had high-grade bacteremia or candidemia, to detect late-appearing endocarditis,38,84,90 retinitis84,91 or other metastatic infection, such as vertebral osteomyelitis.
| III. Fungal Infections in Neutropenic Patients and Newer Antifungal Agents |
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Systemic fungal infections are a major are a major cause of morbidity and mortality among patients with hematologic malignancies and neutropenia. Up to 20% of patients with neutropenia may experience an invasive fungal infection,1 and autopsy studies suggest that invasive fungal infections are encountered in as many as 40% of patients with hematologic malignancies.2 Important risk factors for the development of invasive fungal infections in neutropenic patients are well described.3 The most common fungal infections in this group include superficial and invasive infections due to Candida species and invasive aspergillosis. In addition to these more common fungi, several emerging pathogens including Fusarium species, Trichosporon beigelii, Scedosporium species, and the dematiaceous fungi.4,5 The growing number of patients with disease due to these fungal pathogens has been an important factor leading to the development of the newer broad spectrum antifungal agents. The following is a brief description of the more common mycoses affecting patients with hematologic malignancies and neutropenia.
Candidiasis
Invasive candidiasis in the neutropenic patient is usually associated with well-defined risk factors including the presence of the CVC, corticosteroids, broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure, mucositis and longer duration of neutropenia.6 The most common organism associated with invasive candidiasis in the neutropenic patient is Candida albicans, followed by C. tropicalis, C. glabrata, and C. parapsilosis. C. krusei is also an important pathogen among neutropenic hosts, though this organism is not a prevalent pathogen in all centers. The increased incidence of C. krusei has been seen almost exclusively in centers where fluconazole has been widely used for prophylaxis.7 Rarely C. lusitaniae, C. dubliniensis, and C. gulliermondii are seen in this population.
The overall mortality among patients with invasive Candida infections approaches 60%, with mortality attributable to Candida ranging from 15-38%.8 In addition to increased mortality, patients with invasive Candida infection may develop visceral complications of infection including endophthalmitis and chronic disseminated (hepatosplenic) candidiasis.9,10 Both of these complications typically occur days or weeks following the initial episode of candidemia and usually present after neutrophil recovery.
The treatment of uncomplicated candidemia in this patient population involves the use of an effective antifungal agent until neutrophil recovery, but not less than 14 days.11 CVC removal is recommended when possible. Complicated Candida infections such as endophthalmitis and chronic disseminated disease usually require several weeks or months of therapy and involve initial aggressive therapy with AmB.11
Invasive Aspergillosis
Invasive infection due to Aspergillus species is among the most serious infectious complications in neutropenic patients. Risk factors that are strongly associated with invasive aspergillosis include longer duration of neutropenia, use of glucocorticosteroids and other immunosuppressive agents, and chronic graft versus host disease.12,13 The most common pathogens in this group include A. fumigatus, A. terreus, A. flavus, and A. niger. These infections often begin as unremitting fever despite broad-spectrum antibacterials and are eventually accompanied by pulmonary infiltrates in most patients. In the vast majority of cases, the lungs are the portals of entry. In neutropenic and allogeneic bone marrow transplant recipients, mortality due to invasive aspergillosis approximates 80%, and approaches 100% with central nervous system (CNS) involvement.14
Options for initial therapy for invasive aspergillosis are limited. Higher doses of AmB deoxycholate (AmB-d) (1.0-1.5 mg/kg/d) or a lipid formulation of amphotericin B (at least 5 mg/kg/d) are advised in most cases.15 Parenteral itraconazole and caspofungin are indicated for cases of refractory aspergillosis unresponsive to or intolerant of initial therapy with an AmB formulation.15
Fusariosis
Infections due to Fusarium species have become increasingly common in the neutropenic population, though the overall frequency varies widely between institutions.4,16 F. solani is the most frequent pathogen isolated, followed by F. oxysporum and F. moniliforme. The most important risk factor among this group of patients is prolonged period of neutropenia, often greater than 3 weeks.4 Fusariosis may emerge in the face of empiric antifungal therapy and is associated with skin lesions and positive blood cultures in the majority of patients.4 There is no currently effective therapy for fusariosis, although high dose amphotericin is probably the drug of choice. Most cases of fusariosis have fatal outcomes unless there is rapid neutrophil recovery and an absence of graft versus host disease.16
Other Emerging Fungi
A number of fungal pathogens including Trichosporon beigelii, Blastoschizomyces capitatus, Saccharromyces cerevisiae, and Malassezia furfur have emerged as increasingly common causes of fungemia and invasive fungal infections among neutropenic patients.17 These infections are typically associated with central venous catheters and most often require catheter removal in addition to a specific antifungal therapy. In addition, the phaeohyphomycoses (pigmented fungi), including Bipolaris spp., Alternaria and Exophiala, have emerged as important pathogens in these patients.18 Infections due to the pigmented fungi may present with cutaneous, sinopulmonary or CNS involvement and are typically refractory to therapy with AmB. Among the currently available agents, itraconazole appears to have greatest activity against these pathogens.
New Antifungal Agents
Over the last decade, the growing number of immunocompromised patients at risk for invasive fungal infections, the development of antifungal resistance among older more established pathogens, and the emergence of new fungal pathogens have led to an emphasis on the development of newer antifungal agents. In this section, we will discuss some of the newer antifungal agents and their potential role in the neutropenic patient.
Polyenes
Amphotericin B Deoxycholate (AmB-d)
A brief discussion of amphotericin B deoxycholate (AmB-d) is necessary to understand and appreciate the impact of the newer lipid formulations of AmB (Table 6
). AmB-d is a polyene antifungal agent approved for use in humans in 1959. The mechanism of action of AmB, as well as other polyenes such as nystatin, is mediated through binding to ergosterol, the principal sterol component in the cell membrane of most fungi. This binding results in defects of the cell membrane that cause depolarization and increased membrane permeability, eventually leading to cell death.19
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AmB-d is among the oldest systemic antifungal agents and has activity against most important fungal pathogens in humans, and it remains a mainstay of antifungal therapy. Notable exceptions include Candida lusitaniae, certain Aspergillus species including A. terreus, most Fusarium species, Malassezia furfur, Trichosporon beigelii, Scedosporium species, and the dematiaceous fungi.
Lipid Formulations of Amphotericin B
There are currently three lipid formulations of AmB: AmB lipid complex (ABLC), AmB colloidal dispersion (ABCD), and liposomal AmB (L-AmB). Each of these lipid formulations of AmB shares the same mechanism of action with the parent compound, and all are less nephrotoxic than AmB-d.23 The spectrum of activity is virtually identical to the parent compound. None of these agents are approved for primary therapy for an established fungal infection; however, they are approved for salvage therapy among patients unresponsive to or intolerant of AmB-d.
Amphotericin B Lipid Complex
ABLC is composed of AmB complexed with two phospholipids, dimyristoyal phophatidyl (DMPC) and dimyristoral phosphatidylglycerol choline (DMPG) in a 7:3 ratio. ABLC has a 35% molar ratio of AmB to the lipids, which are formed into ribbon-like structures complexed with AmB. Few randomized prospective studies with ABLC have been conducted. The bulk of clinical experience with ABLC prior to FDA approval was through a compassionate use program.24 Among the lipid formulations of AmB, ABLC reaches the highest concentrations in liver, spleen, lungs and reticuloendothelial tissues.23 The usual dosing of ABLC is 5 mg/kg/d, though doses of as much as 20 mg/kg/d have been given without substantial nephrotoxicity. Likewise, lower doses (e.g. 3 mg/kg/d) have been effective when given to patients with invasive candidiasis.
Amphotericin B Colloidal Dispersion
ABCD is a stable complex of AmB and cholesteryl sulfate in a 1:1 molar ratio. The in vitro activity of ABCD appears identical to that of conventional AmB-d; however, tissue distribution of ABCD differs in several aspects from AmB-d. The compound is concentrated significantly in the liver but achieves significantly lower concentrations in other organs such as the spleen, kidneys, lungs and brain.23
In a large, randomized, double-blinded clinical trial involving the empiric use of ABCD versus AmB-d for 196 persistently febrile neutropenic patients, both compounds appeared clinically equivalent with approximately 50% success rates in each arm.25 Among the ABCD recipients, there was significantly less nephrotoxicity but significantly more infusion-related adverse events including fever, chills, and hypoxia than in the AmB-d recipients. The reported frequency of these adverse events appears to be greater than that seen with the other two lipid formulations and conventional AmB-d.24 ABCD is administered at doses of 3 to 6 mg/kg and doses as high as 7.5 mg/kg have been administered safely. Thus, the major disadvantage of use of ABCD has been a high incidence of acute infusion-related side effects including chills, fever and hypoxia.
Liposomal Amphotericin B (L-AmB)
AmBisome is the only true liposomal lipid formulation of AmB. This compound consists of spherical vessels made up of hydrogenated soy phosphatidylcholine and disteaoryl phosphatidylglycerol stabilized by cholesterol and combined with AmB. Its in vitro activity is comparable to that of AmB, and the pharmacokinetics of L-AmB are quite distinct from the other two lipid formulations of AmB.23 Plasma concentrations of L-AmB are much higher since the compound remains in the circulation much longer. Like the other formulations, L-AmB concentrates in the reticuloendothelial system. L-AmB has the highest concentrations in the CNS of all these compounds.26 In addition, it appears to be the least nephrotoxic and least associated with infusion-related toxicity compared with all other formulations of AmB.
L-AmB is the most widely studied of the lipid formulations of AmB. In the largest published randomized double-blinded study to date, 687 persistently febrile and neutropenic patients received empiric antifungal treatment with either AmB-d or L-AmB.27 Re