It’s time to revisit guidelines endorsing empirical antifungal therapy
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– Empirical antifungal treatment did not improve the rate of survival free of invasive fungal infection among high-risk colonized patients in the intensive care unit, based on results from the EMPIRICUS randomized controlled trial.

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Taken together, findings from EMPIRICUS and similar trials suggest that empirical antifungal treatment may reduce rates of invasive infection in critically ill patients, but does not improve survival.

These findings highlight two emerging themes in critical care medicine – less is more and targeted therapies are important when treating invasive fungal infection. In particular, the safety and efficacy of the newer antifungal agents are driving greater empirical use, yet this practice increases the cost of care and may contribute to antifungal resistance.

Guidelines have been implemented for empirical treatment of Candida and serial surveillance, yet there are no conclusive mortality benefits for this approach. Data have not ruled out the possibility that some subgroups of patients may see a survival benefit but, in light of the situation, guidelines concerning empirical treatment and surveillance should be revisited.

Like other prophylactic interventions, the risks and potential benefits of empirical echinocandin therapy for critically ill, immune-competent patients in the ICU need to be studied. Novel biomarkers or clinical risk assessment algorithms may help in identifying those patients who are at highest risk of infection-related morbidity and mortality and would benefit most from targeted preventive therapies.
 

Trishul Siddharthan, MD, Petros C. Karakousis, MD, and William Checkley, MD, PhD, are with the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. They made their remarks in an accompanying editorial in JAMA (2016 Oct 5. doi: 10.1001/jama.2016.13801).

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Taken together, findings from EMPIRICUS and similar trials suggest that empirical antifungal treatment may reduce rates of invasive infection in critically ill patients, but does not improve survival.

These findings highlight two emerging themes in critical care medicine – less is more and targeted therapies are important when treating invasive fungal infection. In particular, the safety and efficacy of the newer antifungal agents are driving greater empirical use, yet this practice increases the cost of care and may contribute to antifungal resistance.

Guidelines have been implemented for empirical treatment of Candida and serial surveillance, yet there are no conclusive mortality benefits for this approach. Data have not ruled out the possibility that some subgroups of patients may see a survival benefit but, in light of the situation, guidelines concerning empirical treatment and surveillance should be revisited.

Like other prophylactic interventions, the risks and potential benefits of empirical echinocandin therapy for critically ill, immune-competent patients in the ICU need to be studied. Novel biomarkers or clinical risk assessment algorithms may help in identifying those patients who are at highest risk of infection-related morbidity and mortality and would benefit most from targeted preventive therapies.
 

Trishul Siddharthan, MD, Petros C. Karakousis, MD, and William Checkley, MD, PhD, are with the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. They made their remarks in an accompanying editorial in JAMA (2016 Oct 5. doi: 10.1001/jama.2016.13801).

Body

 

Taken together, findings from EMPIRICUS and similar trials suggest that empirical antifungal treatment may reduce rates of invasive infection in critically ill patients, but does not improve survival.

These findings highlight two emerging themes in critical care medicine – less is more and targeted therapies are important when treating invasive fungal infection. In particular, the safety and efficacy of the newer antifungal agents are driving greater empirical use, yet this practice increases the cost of care and may contribute to antifungal resistance.

Guidelines have been implemented for empirical treatment of Candida and serial surveillance, yet there are no conclusive mortality benefits for this approach. Data have not ruled out the possibility that some subgroups of patients may see a survival benefit but, in light of the situation, guidelines concerning empirical treatment and surveillance should be revisited.

Like other prophylactic interventions, the risks and potential benefits of empirical echinocandin therapy for critically ill, immune-competent patients in the ICU need to be studied. Novel biomarkers or clinical risk assessment algorithms may help in identifying those patients who are at highest risk of infection-related morbidity and mortality and would benefit most from targeted preventive therapies.
 

Trishul Siddharthan, MD, Petros C. Karakousis, MD, and William Checkley, MD, PhD, are with the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. They made their remarks in an accompanying editorial in JAMA (2016 Oct 5. doi: 10.1001/jama.2016.13801).

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It’s time to revisit guidelines endorsing empirical antifungal therapy
It’s time to revisit guidelines endorsing empirical antifungal therapy

 

– Empirical antifungal treatment did not improve the rate of survival free of invasive fungal infection among high-risk colonized patients in the intensive care unit, based on results from the EMPIRICUS randomized controlled trial.

 

– Empirical antifungal treatment did not improve the rate of survival free of invasive fungal infection among high-risk colonized patients in the intensive care unit, based on results from the EMPIRICUS randomized controlled trial.

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FROM ESICM CONGRESS 2016

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Key clinical point: Empirical micafungin therapy does not improve invasive fungal infection–free survival in ICU patients with suspected fungal infection.

Major finding: The day 28 invasive fungal infection–free survival was 68% with empirical micafungin and 60.2% with placebo, a nonsignificant difference.

Data source: A randomized controlled trial among 260 critically ill patients with ICU-acquired sepsis, Candida colonization, and multiple organ failure who were exposed to broad-spectrum antibacterial agents (EMPIRICUS trial).

Disclosures: Dr. Timsit disclosed that he receives lecture fees from Gilead, Pfizer, Merck, and Astellas; research grants to his university and research organization from Astellas, Gilead, Merck, and Pfizer companies; a consultancy honorarium from Bayer; and personal fees from Abbott for scientific board participation; additionally, he discloses participation on a scientific committee of epidemiological studies organized by Astellas and Merck companies outside the submitted work. Astellas provided a research grant to the Grenoble Alpes University Hospital based on the final study protocol. The study was sponsored by the University of Grenoble 1/Albert Michallon University Hospital. The University of Grenoble provided compensation to the participating hospitals and universities for extra costs associated with the study.