Selective decontamination and antibiotic resistance in ICUs
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Publication date
2015-06-24
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Abstract
Selective digestive decontamination (SDD) and selective oropharyngeal decontamination (SOD) have been associated with reduced mortality and lower ICU-acquired bacteremia and ventilator-associated pneumonia rates in areas with low levels of antibiotic resistance. However, the effect of selective decontamination (SDD/SOD) in areas where multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria are endemic is less clear. It will be important to determine whether SDD/SOD improves patient outcome in such settings and how these measures affect the epidemiology of multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. Here we review the current evidence on the effects of SDD/SOD on antibiotic resistance development in individual ICU patients as well as the effect on ICU ecology, the latter including both ICU-level antibiotic resistance and antibiotic resistance development during long-term use of SDD/SOD.
Keywords
INTENSIVE-CARE UNITS, DIGESTIVE-TRACT DECONTAMINATION, PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL, SINGLE-CENTER EXPERIENCE, LONG-TERM USE, ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE, KLEBSIELLA-PNEUMONIAE, DOUBLE-BLIND, OROPHARYNGEAL DECONTAMINATION, COLISTIN RESISTANCE
Citation
Plantinga, N L & Bonten, M J M 2015, 'Selective decontamination and antibiotic resistance in ICUs', Critical Care, vol. 19, 19:259. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-015-0967-9