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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2003, p. 444-445, Vol. 47, No. 1
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.1.444-445.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
| LETTER TO THE EDITOR |
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However, it remains unclear if the superiority of moxifloxacin is a consequence of better coverage of the so called "atypical agents," the increased effectiveness in patients with penicillin-resistant pneumococci, the choice of treatment in the control group, or any other reason. A further analysis of the data might therefore be instructive. It would be interesting to know if the difference in outcome between the two study groups is equally, not, or possibly more apparent in patients pretreated and those not pretreated with antibiotics? Is the difference in outcome between the two study groups clearer in those patients in whom any etiologic agent was demonstrated than in those in whom no agent was found?
Very few CAP studies include a significant number of severely ill patients, and therefore, very little evidence from randomized controlled trials is available to guide the management of patients treated in intensive care units (ICUs). Possibly, the moxifloxacin study might give valuable information. Therefore, it would be interesting to know how many of the patients studied were treated in the ICU and how many of them were ventilated during hospitalization. Was the difference in outcome the same in this subgroup of critically ill CAP patients?
Finally, it is important to remember that although 36% of the patients included in the trial were pretreated with antibiotics (as is the case for "real-life" hospitalized CAP patients), patients pretreated with a fluoroquinolone were excluded and therefore no conclusions about the effectiveness of moxifloxacin in this setting can be drawn. Avoidance of fluoroquinolones as the treatment of choice in this setting may be important (1, 3).
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Bart J. A. Rijnders
Department of Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases University Hospital Leuven Herestraat 49 B-3000 Leuven, Belgium
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| Phone: 3216344275, Fax: 3216344230, E-mail: bart.rijnders{at}uz.kuleuven.ac.be |
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Rijnders proposes a number of analyses aimed at elucidating the reasons for the superior outcomes observed in moxifloxacin-treated patients. However, the proposed analyses do not reflect prospectively defined endpoints of this study and the numbers of patients available in certain stratifications are small, thus potentially introducing bias and confounding the interpretation of the results. The variables Rijnders proposes to evaluate (e.g., activity against atypical pathogens or effectiveness against CAP in the 10 patients treated in the ICU) certainly warrant investigation but would be best examined in further clinical studies prospectively designed to capture relevant data. We also note that moxifloxacin i.v./p.o. efficacy in patients with severe CAP and CAP due to atypical infections has been analyzed and reported (H. Lode, S. Choudhri, D. Haverstock, P. Jackson, and D. Church, Abstr. 22nd Int. Symp. Intensive Care Emerg. Med., abstr. P88, 2002; S. Larsen, S. Choudhri, D. Haverstock, P. Jackson, and D. Church, Abstr. 41st Intersci. Conf. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., abstr. 865, 2001) on the basis of a combined analysis of the data generated in our study and a second moxifloxacin i.v./p.o. registration study.
Finally, Rijnders notes that patients who had failed prior fluoroquinolone therapy were excluded from this study. As is routine, patients who had failed prior treatment with the comparator regimen (ß-lactam-ß-lactamase inhibitor combination) were also excluded. Thus, both treatments might have benefited from exclusion of patients at high risk for failure. Rijnders cites two recent publications that suggest that prior treatment with older fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin, ofloxacin, or ciprofloxacin) is a risk factor for development of fluoroquinolone-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae infection (1, 3). As reflected in recent CAP treatment guidelines from the American Thoracic Society, selection of the most potent fluoroquinolone, with moxifloxacin the most potent (lowest MIC), may be advisable to avoid emergence of fluoroquinolone resistance among S. pneumoniae and maintain the efficacy of this valuable antimicrobial class (4).
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Roger Finch*
Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases The Clinical Sciences Building Nottingham City Hospital Hucknall Rd. Nottingham NG5 1PB, United Kingdom
Dirk Schürmann
Rolf Kubin
Owen Collins
Jose L. Izquierdo
F. William Ogundare
Gert Höffken
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* Phone: 3216344275, Fax: 3216344230, E-mail: bart.rijnders{at}uz.kuleuven.ac.be * Phone: 44-115-840-4741 Fax: 44-115-840-4742 E-mail: r.finch{at}nottingham.ac.uk. |
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