Empiric antibiotic use--aztreonam as a model.
Empiric antibiotic therapy, which accounts for over 90 percent of in-hospital therapeutic antibiotic decisions, may be defined as tentative therapy designed to decrease morbidity and mortality associated with severe infection due to unidentified bacterial pathogens. In the 48- to 72-hour interim between presentation and the availability of reliable culture and sensitivity data that allow for definitive therapy, empiric therapy is extremely important. Aztreonam, the first member of the monobactam class of monocyclic beta-lactam antibiotics, is highly active against most gram-negative aerobic bacteria, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Its spectrum of activity is similar to that of the aminoglycosides but without the toxicity associated with those agents. For this reason, aztreonam may play an important role in empiric therapy. Currently, it can be recommended as single-agent empiric therapy only for severe urinary tract infections, but in combination with a variety of other agents, it has proved useful against a wide range of bacterial infections, and in certain subgroups, such as penicillin-allergic patients, it may represent the treatment of choice. It is not yet clear whether aztreonam is superior to other relatively nontoxic agents, such as the third-generation cephalosporins or carbapenems, but there is little doubt that this new agent is a generally safe and effective drug for the treatment of suspected gram-negative sepsis.[1]References
- Empiric antibiotic use--aztreonam as a model. Levin, S. Am. J. Med. (1990) [Pubmed]
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