AI Article Synopsis

  • Cefmetazole is effective against infections caused by extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing bacteria and may serve as an alternative to carbapenems in treating invasive urinary tract infections.
  • The study involved 127 hospitalized patients, with 81 receiving cefmetazole and 46 receiving meropenem, and tracked outcomes like effectiveness, recurrence, and mortality rates.
  • After adjustments for patient differences, cefmetazole showed clinical and microbiological effectiveness comparable to meropenem, with the same main type of β-lactamase gene identified in all cases.

Article Abstract

Cefmetazole is active against extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing (ESBLEC) and is a potential candidate for carbapenem-sparing therapy. This multicenter, observational study included patients hospitalized for invasive urinary tract infection due to ESBLEC between March 2020 and November 2021 at 10 facilities in Japan, for whom either cefmetazole or meropenem was initiated as a definitive therapy within 96 h of culture collection and continued for at least 3 d. Outcomes included clinical and microbiological effectiveness, recurrence within 28 d, and all-cause mortality (14 d, 30 d, in-hospital). Outcomes were adjusted for the inverse probability of propensity scores for receiving cefmetazole or meropenem. Eighty-one and forty-six patients were included in the cefmetazole and meropenem groups, respectively. Bacteremia accounted for 43% of the cefmetazole group, and 59% of the meropenem group. The crude clinical effectiveness, 14 d, 30 d, and in-hospital mortality for patients in the cefmetazole and meropenem groups were 96.1% vs 90.9%, 0% vs 2.3%, 0% vs 12.5%, and 2.6% vs 13.3%, respectively. After propensity score adjustment, clinical effectiveness, the risk of in-hospital mortality, and the risk of recurrence were similar between the two groups ( = 0.54, = 0.10, and = 0.79, respectively). In all cases with available data (cefmetazole : = 61, meropenem : = 22), both drugs were microbiologically effective. In all isolates, was detected as the extended-spectrum β-lactamase gene. The predominant CTX-M subtype was CTX-M-27 (47.6%). Cefmetazole showed clinical and bacteriological effectiveness comparable to meropenem against invasive urinary tract infection due to ESBLECs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10583665PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aac.00510-23DOI Listing

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