Efficacy of Early Administration of Liposomal Amphotericin B in Patients with Septic Shock: A Nationwide Observational Study

Author(s):  
Masato Tashiro ◽  
Takahiro Takazono ◽  
Yuki Ota ◽  
Tomotaro Wakamura ◽  
Akinori Takahashi ◽  
...  

Abstract To determine the most suitable time to initiate liposomal amphotericin B (L-AMB) treatment in patients with invasive fungal infections, patients with septic shock treated with L-AMB were identified from the Japanese Diagnosis Procedure Combination national database to determine their survival rates following septic shock onset, mortality during shock, and shock cessation period. We identified 141 patients administered L-AMB: 60 patients received treatment on the day of septic shock onset (early L-AMB group), whereas 81 patients received treatment after the onset (delayed L-AMB group). Survival rates after septic shock onset were higher in the early L-AMB group than in the delayed L-AMB group (4 weeks: 68.4% vs 57.9%, P=0.197; 6 weeks: 62.2% vs 44.5%, P=0.061; 12 weeks: 43.4% vs 35.0%, P=0.168, respectively). Mortality during septic shock was significantly lower in the early L-AMB group than in the delayed L-AMB group (13% vs 42%, P<0.001), with a significant difference confirmed after adjusting for confounding factors (odds ratio: 0.240, 95% confidence interval: 0.096-0.601, P=0.002). Septic shock cessation period was shorter in the early L-AMB group than in the delayed L-AMB group (7.0±7.0 days vs 16.5±15.4 days, P<0.001). L-AMB administration at septic shock onset could be associated with early shock cessation and decreased mortality.

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