Treatment of serious gram-negative infections with aztreonam.
Publication/Presentation Date
11-1-1984
Abstract
Aztreonam (SQ 26,776) is the first parenteral monobactam agent to be used in patient trials. The agent has significant activity in vitro against facultative aerobic gram-negative bacteria but not against gram-positive or anaerobic bacteria. Aztreonam was used for a year to treat 106 hospitalized patients with a total of 131 documented gram-negative infections. Important exclusion criteria included granulocytopenia, hyperbilirubinemia, meningitis, patients less than 13 years of age, pregnancy, and history of anaphylaxis to penicillin. In this study of 35 men and 71 women, there were 67 cases of pyelonephritis (25% bacteremic), 19 of pneumonia (16% bacteremic), 10 of skin or soft-tissue infections, 9 cases of osteomyelitis, and 6 cases of postpartum endometritis. During the study period, 159 facultative aerobic gram-negative bacteria were tested for aztreonam susceptibility, and 144 (91%) were found to be susceptible. Eighty percent of infections were cured by both clinical and microbiological criteria and each of the other 26 infections showed clinical improvement. Eradication of the infecting organism was achieved in 89% of infections without adverse reaction or drug toxicity.
Volume
150
Issue
5
First Page
623
Last Page
630
ISSN
0022-1899
Published In/Presented At
Greenberg, R. N., Reilly, P. M., Luppen, K. L., McMillian, R., Bollinger, M., Wolk, S. M., Darji, T. B., & Noorani, A. A. (1984). Treatment of serious gram-negative infections with aztreonam. The Journal of infectious diseases, 150(5), 623–630. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/150.5.623
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
6541672
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article