Failure of outpatient antibiotics among patients hospitalized for acute bacterial skin infections: What is the clinical relevance?

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Failure of outpatient antibiotics among patients hospitalized for acute bacterial skin infections: What is the clinical relevance?

Am J Emerg Med. 2016 Jun;34(6):957-62

Authors: Jenkins TC, Knepper BC, McCollister BD, Moore SJ, Pawlowski SW, Perlman DM, Saveli CC, O'Leary ST, Burman WJ

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines recommend that patients hospitalized for acute bacterial skin infections after failure of outpatient antibiotic therapy be managed as "severe" infections; however, the clinical relevance of apparent failure of outpatient therapy is not clear.
METHODS: This was a secondary analysis of a multicenter, retrospective cohort of adults and children hospitalized for cellulitis, abscess, or wound infection. We compared clinical features, laboratory and microbiology findings, antibiotic treatment, and outcomes among patients who received outpatient antibiotics prior to admission and those who did not.
RESULTS: Of 533 patients, 179 (34%) received outpatient antibiotics prior to admission. Compared with those who did not, patients who received antibiotics prior to admission less frequently had fever (18% vs 26%, P=.04) and leukocytosis (33% vs 51%, P<.001). In the 202 cases where a microorganism was identified, Staphylococcus aureus was more common among those who received antibiotics prior to admission (75% vs 58%, P=.02), particularly methicillin-resistant S aureus (41% vs 27%, P=.049), whereas aerobic gram-negative bacilli were less common (3% vs 13%, P=.03). After hospitalization, clinical failure occurred with similar frequency between the 2 groups (12% vs 11%, P=.73).
CONCLUSIONS: Patients hospitalized with skin infections after apparently failing outpatient therapy had clinical features suggestive of less severe infection and similar outcomes compared with patients who did not receive antibiotics prior to admission. Our results suggest that inpatient treatment for patients not responding to outpatient therapy should focus on methicillin-resistant S aureus, not gram-negative pathogens.

PMID: 26947377 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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