Procalcitonin to guide duration of antimicrobial therapy in intensive care units: A systematic review

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Abstract

Can the use of serum procalcitonin levels safely reduce antimicrobial use in intensive care unit (ICU) patients? We performed a systematic literature review that identified 6 published randomized controlled trials comparing PCT-guided antimicrobial therapy to usual care in ICU patients, extracting data on ICU and patient characteristics, PCT guideline content, intensity of antimicrobial exposure, ICU length of stay, infection relapse and mortality. Procalcitonin guidance was associated with significantly reduced antimicrobial exposure (effect sizes, 19.5%-38%) in all 5 studies assessing its impact on treatment duration but did not significantly impact antimicrobial exposure in the study assessing treatment initiation only. Length of ICU stay was significantly decreased in 2 studies but was unchanged in the others. Neither infection relapse nor mortality varied significantly in any of the studies. Procalcitonin guidance of antimicrobial duration appears to decrease antimicrobial use in the ICU safely and significantly and may also decrease the length of stay in the ICU. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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APA

Agarwal, R., & Schwartz, D. N. (2011, August 15). Procalcitonin to guide duration of antimicrobial therapy in intensive care units: A systematic review. Clinical Infectious Diseases. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/cir408

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