1.Clinical Observation of Neutropenia Patients with Hematonosis Treated with Polymyxin B Sulfate.
Journal of Experimental Hematology 2022;30(5):1596-1600
OBJECTIVE:
To observe the clinical efficacy and safety of polymyxin B sulfate in febrile neutropenia patients with hematonosis.
METHODS:
Clinical data of 50 patients in the department of hematology, Fujian Medical University Union Hospital from October 2019 to September 2020 were collected. All the patients developed febrile neutropenia after chemotherapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. According to the results of drug susceptible test, polymyxin B sulfate was administrated mainly when the empirical antimicrobial treatments was poor and the pathogenic microbes test was positive.
RESULTS:
A total of 85 times of infection occurred in 50 patients. The infection sites were lung, blood flow, intestinal tract, oral cavity, perianal, soft tissue and nasal cavity. Gram negative bacteria was the main pathogenic microbe. After administration of polymyxin B sulfate when the etiology was confirmed, the total effective rate was 68%, especially the effective rate increased significantly after more than 7 days of polymyxin B sulfate treatment. Also, 24% and 8% of the patients were discharged automatically and died respectively. The effective rate of patients receiving carbapenem antibiotics changed to polymyxin B sulfate within 14 or 7 days was 80% and 70.6%, respectively, while the effective rate of patients who changed after 2 weeks was only 33.3%. The effective rate of patients receiving tigecycline changed to polymyxin B sulfate within 14 or 7 days was 80% and 66.7%, respectively. The incidence of adverse reactions of polymyxin B sulfate was low, most of which were mild, and only one patient occurred rhabdomyolysis.
CONCLUSION
Polymyxin B sulfate has good clinical efficacy and safety in febrile neutropenia patients with hematonosis.
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use*
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Carbapenems
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Febrile Neutropenia/drug therapy*
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Humans
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Polymyxin B/therapeutic use*
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Tigecycline
2.Chinese consensus guidelines for therapeutic drug monitoring of polymyxin B, endorsed by the Infection and Chemotherapy Committee of the Shanghai Medical Association and the Therapeutic Drug Monitoring Committee of the Chinese Pharmacological Society.
Xiaofen LIU ; Chenrong HUANG ; Phillip J BERGEN ; Jian LI ; Jingjing ZHANG ; Yijian CHEN ; Yongchuan CHEN ; Beining GUO ; Fupin HU ; Jinfang HU ; Linlin HU ; Xin LI ; Hongqiang QIU ; Hua SHAO ; Tongwen SUN ; Yu WANG ; Ping XU ; Jing YANG ; Yong YANG ; Zhenwei YU ; Bikui ZHANG ; Huaijun ZHU ; Xiaocong ZUO ; Yi ZHANG ; Liyan MIAO ; Jing ZHANG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2023;24(2):130-142
Polymyxin B, which is a last-line antibiotic for extensively drug-resistant Gram-negative bacterial infections, became available in China in Dec. 2017. As dose adjustments are based solely on clinical experience of risk toxicity, treatment failure, and emergence of resistance, there is an urgent clinical need to perform therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) to optimize the use of polymyxin B. It is thus necessary to standardize operating procedures to ensure the accuracy of TDM and provide evidence for their rational use. We report a consensus on TDM guidelines for polymyxin B, as endorsed by the Infection and Chemotherapy Committee of the Shanghai Medical Association and the Therapeutic Drug Monitoring Committee of the Chinese Pharmacological Society. The consensus panel was composed of clinicians, pharmacists, and microbiologists from different provinces in China and Australia who made recommendations regarding target concentrations, sample collection, reporting, and explanation of TDM results. The guidelines provide the first-ever consensus on conducting TDM of polymyxin B, and are intended to guide optimal clinical use.
Humans
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Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use*
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China
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Drug Monitoring/methods*
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Polymyxin B
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Practice Guidelines as Topic
3.Efficacy and safefy of Polymyxin B treatment for neutropenic patients suffering from refractory Gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infection.
Meng ZHOU ; Hui Zhu KANG ; Cheng Yuan GU ; Yue Jun LIU ; Ying WANG ; Miao MIAO ; Jian Hong FU ; Xiao Wen TANG ; Hui Ying QIU ; Cheng Cheng FU ; Zheng Ming JIN ; Cai Xia LI ; Su Ning CHEN ; Ai Ning SUN ; De Pei WU ; Yue HAN
Chinese Journal of Hematology 2023;44(6):484-489
Objective:b> To assess the efficacy and safety of polymyxin B in neutropenic patients with hematologic disorders who had refractory gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infection. Methods:b> From August 2021 to July 2022, we retrospectively analyzed neutropenic patients with refractory gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infection who were treated with polymyxin B in the Department of Hematology of the First Affiliated Hospital of the Soochow University between August 2021 to July 2022. The cumulative response rate was then computed. Results:b> The study included 27 neutropenic patients with refractory gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infections. Polymyxin B therapy was effective in 22 of 27 patients. The median time between the onset of fever and the delivery of polymyxin B was 3 days [interquartile range (IQR) : 2-5]. The median duration of polymyxin B treatment was 7 days (IQR: 5-11). Polymyxin B therapy had a median antipyretic time of 37 h (IQR: 32-70). The incidence of acute renal dysfunction was 14.8% (four out of 27 cases), all classified as "injury" according to RIFLE criteria. The incidence of hyperpigmentation was 59.3%. Conclusion:b> Polymyxin B is a viable treatment option for granulocytopenia patients with refractory gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infections.
Humans
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Polymyxin B/adverse effects*
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Retrospective Studies
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Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/complications*
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Fever/drug therapy*
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Sepsis/drug therapy*
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Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use*
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Bacteremia/complications*