AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to assess the clinical efficacy and safety of vancomycin loading doses in patients with MRSA infections, comparing outcomes before and after a change in dosing protocol at a hospital.
  • The new protocol reserved loading doses for hemodynamically unstable patients, while previously all patients received them based on weight.
  • Results showed no significant difference in inpatient mortality or other secondary outcomes between patients receiving loading doses and those who did not, indicating that routine loading doses may not improve outcomes in stable patients.

Article Abstract

Vancomycin loading doses are commonly used to quickly attain target serum concentrations; however, data supporting their effect on clinical patient outcomes is limited. In April 2020, our institution revised our pharmacist-driven vancomycin dosing protocol to reserve loading doses for hemodynamically unstable patients with suspected serious methicillin-resistant (MRSA) infections. Prior to the protocol update, all patients treated with vancomycin at our institution received a weight-based loading dose. The purpose of this study is to assess clinical efficacy and safety outcomes related to the use of vancomycin loading doses. A retrospective, quasi-experimental study was performed to compare clinical outcomes in adult patients treated with vancomycin for laboratory-confirmed MRSA infections. Patients who received vancomycin therapy prior to our institution's vancomycin dosing protocol revisions (pre-intervention) were compared to patients who received vancomycin after the revisions (post-intervention). The primary outcome was all-cause, inpatient mortality. Secondary outcomes included persistent signs and symptoms of infection ≥5 days after vancomycin initiation, switch to alternative anti-MRSA therapy, and nephrotoxicity. A total of 122 patients (63 pre-intervention patients and 59 post-intervention patients) were included. Receipt of a vancomycin loading dose did not impact the rate of inpatient mortality (4.76%vs 6.78%; OR 1.46, 95% CI [0.31, 6.79]). All secondary outcomes were similar between the two groups, including persistent signs and symptoms of infection, switch to alternative anti-MRSA therapy, and nephrotoxicity. Routine use of vancomycin loading doses is not associated with improved outcomes in hemodynamically stable patients with MRSA infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10786050PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00185787231196435DOI Listing

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