Background: Melioidosis is a common community-acquired infectious disease in northeast Thailand associated with overall mortality of approximately 40% in hospitalized patients, and over 70% in severe cases. Ceftazidime is recommended for parenteral treatment in patients with suspected melioidosis. Meropenem is increasingly used but evidence to support this is lacking. Methods: A decision tree was used to estimate the cost-effectiveness of treating non-severe and severe suspected acute melioidosis cases with either ceftazidime or meropenem. Results: Empirical treatment with meropenem is likely to be cost-effective providing meropenem reduces mortality in severe cases by at least 9% and the proportion with subsequent culture-confirmed melioidosis is over 20%. Conclusions: In this context, treatment of severe cases with meropenem is likely to be cost-effective, while the evidence to support the use of meropenem in non-severe suspected melioidosis is not yet available.
CITATION STYLE
Hantrakun, V., Chierakul, W., Chetchotisakd, P., Anunnatsiri, S., Currie, B. J., Peacock, S. J., … Lubell, Y. (2015). Cost-effectiveness analysis of parenteral antimicrobials for acute melioidosis in Thailand. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 109(6), 416–418. https://doi.org/10.1093/trstmh/trv002
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