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ORIGINAL ARTICLE Reduction of Bacterial Resistance with Inhaled Antibiotics in the Intensive Care Unit Lucy B. Palmer and Gerald C. Smaldone Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Division, Department of Medicine, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York Abstract Rationale: Multidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO) are the dominant airway pathogens in the intensive care unit (ICU) and present a major treatment challenge to intensivists. Aerosolized antibiotics (AA) result in airway concentrations of drug 100-fold greater than the minimal inhibitory concentration of most bacteria including MDRO. These levels, without systemic toxicity, may eradicate MDRO and reduce the pressure for selection of new resistant organisms. Objectives: To determine if AA effectively eradicate MDRO in the intubated patient without promoting new resistance. New drug resistance to AA was not seen. Compared with AA, resistance to systemic antibiotics significantly increased in placebo patients (P = 0.03). Compared with placebo, AA significantly reduced Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score (mean 6 SEM, 9.3 6 2.7 to 5.3 6 2.6 vs. 8.0 6 23 to 8.6 6 2.10; P = 0.0008). Conclusions: In chronically intubated critically ill patients, AA successfully eradicated existing MDRO organisms and reduced the pressure from systemic agents for new respiratory resistance. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 01878643). Keywords: nebulizer; intubated; Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score; pneumonia Methods: In a double-blind placebo-controlled study, critically ill intubated patients were randomized if they exhibited signs of respiratory infection (purulent secretions and Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score >6). Using a well-characterized aerosol delivery system, AA or saline placebo was given for 14 days or until extubation. The responsible clinician determined administration of systemic antibiotics for ventilator-associated pneumonia and any other infection. Measurements and Main Results: AA eradicated 26 of 27 organisms present at randomization compared with 2 of 23 organisms with placebo (P , 0.0001). AA eradicated the original resistant organism on culture and Gram stain at end of treatment in 14 out of 16 patients compared with 1 of 11 for placebo (P , 0.001). For respiratory infections, intensivists are faced with a clinical conundrum: the use of systemic antibiotics is the main driving force for antimicrobial resistance, and to reduce mortality, guidelines recommend increasing At a Glance Summary Scientific Knowledge on the Subject: The intensive care unit is a haven for multidrug-resistant organisms. They frequently arise in the respiratory tract and they are difficult to eradicate. Routine treatment with broad-spectrum systemic antibiotics can lead to further resistance and superinfection. What This Study Adds to the Field: Inhaled antibiotics can eradicate these organisms and prevent further development of resistance. use of broad-spectrum antibiotics driving resistance (1–6). We hypothesized that aerosolized antibiotics (AA), which achieve local concentrations in the airway routinely 100-fold greater than the minimal inhibitory concentration, will eradicate resistant bacteria in the proximal airways without systemic toxicity or furthering bacterial resistance (7–10). We deliberately ( Received in original form December 9, 2013; accepted in final form March 10, 2014 ) Author Contributions: L.B.P. and G.C.S. jointly conceived and performed this study. They wrote the manuscript and can independently take responsibility for its content. Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Lucy B. Palmer, M.D., Department of Medicine, Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Division, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8172. E-mail: [email protected] Am J Respir Crit Care Med Vol 189, Iss 10, pp 1225–1233, May 15, 2014 Copyright © 2014 by the American Thoracic Society Originally Published in Press as DOI: 10.1164/rccm.201312-2161OC on March 19, 2014 Internet address: www.atsjournals.org Palmer and Smaldone: Inhaled Antibiotics in the ICU 1225 ORIGINAL ARTICLE studied patients at high risk for resistant organisms. Methods This study was a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled single-center trial. Patients requiring mechanical ventilation were candidates for the study if they met the following inclusion criteria: 18 years old or greater, intubated and mechanically ventilated, and expected to survive at least 14 days. All patients enrolled were considered high risk for multidrug-resistant organisms (MDRO) in the respiratory tract. They all had at least three of the four known risk factors for MDRO: (1) greater than 5 days of hospitalization, (2) prior use of systemic antibiotics in the past 90 days, (3) high frequency of resistance in the patient’s hospital, and (4) immunosuppression (11). Exclusion criteria included pregnancy, use of immunosuppressive agents except steroids, neutropenia (,1,000 white blood cells [WBC] per milliliter), history of allergy to study drugs, or subjects whose primary diagnosis was communityacquired pneumonia. Patients with nosocomial infection after treatment of community-acquired pneumonia were not excluded. All subjects enrolled had informed consent approved by the Human Investigations Committee. Study candidates were initially placed in an observational cohort (Figure 1). Patients were eligible for enrollment if they had increased purulent sputum with organisms present on Gram stain, and their Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score (CPIS) was greater than or equal to 6 (includes points for fever, leukocytosis, radiographic changes, hypoxemia, purulence of sputum, Gram stain, and cultures), criteria that we have used previously for treatment trials of respiratory infection (12, 13). After informed consent, patients who entered the treatment cohort were randomized to placebo or AA by the four-block method by a masked pharmacist. The physician clinically responsible for the patient chose all systemic antibiotics given before and during the treatment period. Clinical staff was masked to treatment arms. Five patients in the placebo group left the study shortly after enrollment (withdrew or transferred to another facility). They had received fewer than two doses of drug and no data were available for analysis. AA selection was determined on the basis of the Gram stain of their sputum. Patients with gram-positive bacteria were treated with vancomycin HCL, 120 mg every 8 hours. Those with gram-negative organisms were treated with gentamicinsulfate, 80 mg every 8 hours, or amikacin, 400 mg every 8 hours. Both vancomycin and aminoglycoside were used if both types of organism were present. Placebo consisted of 2 ml of normal saline. Medication or placebo was nebulized via an AeroTech II nebulizer Figure 1. Flow chart for patient recruitment, enrollment, and analysis. AA = aerosolized antibiotics; CPIS = Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score. 1226 American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine Volume 189 Number 10 | May 15 2014 ORIGINAL ARTICLE (Biodex Medical Systems, Shirley, NY). Patients were pretreated with albuterol to prevent bronchospasm. During administration, patients were all on assist control so irregular breathing patterns, such as intermittent mandatory ventilation, were avoided. The ventilator was set to nebulize only during inspiration with ventilator humidification bypassed (humidification significantly reduces nebulizer efficiency [7]). Aerosol treatment was given every 8 hours for 14 days or until the patient was extubated. Sputum cultures were taken early in the morning at baseline and weekly before the first aerosol treatment. Sputum volume was quantified daily Monday through Friday by intermittent suction over 4 hours with no added saline (12). Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) score at time of randomization defined clinical severity of illness. Vital signs, CPIS score, and adverse events were tracked on a daily basis. MDR at our hospital at the time of the study was defined as follows: gram-positive MDROs were oxacillin-resistant Staphylococcal aureus and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus; gram-negative MDROs were amikacin/gentamicin resistant, or ceftazidine resistant, amikacin/gentamicin susceptible. Cultures and Gram stains of these samples were analyzed at the end of treatment (EOT) to determine if the organisms present at randomization were eliminated and if newly resistant organisms to drug administered appeared. An “isolate” is a positive culture of an organism. “Eradication” of an organism is defined as no growth in culture and no visible organisms seen on Gram stain of an organism identified at randomization. Sputum was streaked onto culture media in three sectors consecutively and the growth was classified by growth factor (grade 1–4) (14). This provides a semiquantitative representation of the number of organisms in a culture: the greater the colonies of growth on a plate, the higher the growth factor. Statistics This was a pilot study examining the microbiologic effects of AA. Continuous variables were described using means and standard deviations. Wilcoxon rank sum test was used to test for group difference between nonparametric continuous variables. Fisher exact test was used for Table 1: Demographic and Clinical Data Demographics AA Placebo Sex, N (%) Male 14 (58.3) 13 (72.2) Female 10 (41.7) 5 (27.8) Mean age, yr (mean 6 SD) 57.7 6 23.1 60.6 6 18.2 Ethnicity, N (%) White 21 (87.5) 18 (100) Other 3 (12.5) 0 (0) Clinical information N (%) N (%) Major diagnoses leading to mechanical ventilation Multitrauma, N (%) 6 (25) 4 (22) Surgical intervention, N (%) 7 (29.2) 3 (17) Sepsis, N (%) 3 (12.5) 0 (0) Gastrointestinal, N (%) 1 (4.2) 2 (11) Neurologic insult, N (%) 2 (8.3) 3 (17) Cardiac, N (%) 1 (4.2) 1 (6) Pneumonia, N (%) 0 (0) 1 (6) Respiratory arrest, N (%) 1 (4.2) 1 (6) Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, N (%) 3 (12.5) 2 (11) ETOH withdrawal, N (%) 0 (0) 1 (6) APACHE score, mean 6 SD 20.96 6 5.8 14.4 6 5.5 Ventilation days before randomization, 29.4 6 20.1 32.3 6 18 mean 6 SD CPIS at randomization, mean 6 SD 9.3 6 2.7 8.0 6 2.1 Volume of sputum at randomization (ml/4 hr), 6.9 6 4.7 8.9 6 0.69 mean 6 SD Subjects on SA at randomization, mean 6 SD 24 (100) 18 (100) Subjects on targeted antibiotics at 16 (66) 14 (77) randomization, mean 6 SD Randomization arms, N (%) Gram-negative 12 (50) 9 (50) Gram-positive 10 (41.7) 7 (38.9) Both 2 (8.3) 2 (11.1) P Value 0.517* 0.6616† 0.247* 0.0007† 0.624‡ 0.5† 0.12† 1.000* 0.51* 1.000* 1.000* 1.000* Definition of abbreviations: AA = aerosolized antibiotics; APACHE = Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation; CPIS = Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score; ETOH = alcohol; SA = systemic antibiotics. *Fisher exact test. † Unpaired t test. ‡ Wilcoxon signed rank test. Table 2: Bacterial Isolates from Tracheal Aspirates at Randomization AA Gram-positive bacteria Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus agalactiae Gram-negative bacteria Pseudomonas sp. MDR* Pseudomonas aeruginosa Acinetobacter sp. MDR* Acinetobacter sp. Enterobacter sp. MDR* Enterobacter sp. Escherichia coli Klebsiella pneumoniae Citrobacter freundii Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Placebo 3 5 1 2 7 0 1 6 0 8 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 3 1 3 1 0 0 2 1 1 Definition of abbreviations: AA = aerosolized antibiotics; MDR = multidrug resistant. Details are shown in Table 3, serial cultures in Figure 2. *MDR gram-negative defined as resistance to ceftazidime or amikacin/gentamicin. Palmer and Smaldone: Inhaled Antibiotics in the ICU 1227 1228 MRSA Proteus, Klebsiella R Acinetobacter sp. R–ACG Pseudomonas R–C MRSA Acinetobacter sp. R–ACG, MSSA Acinetobacter sp. R–CG MRSA MSSA, Escherichia coli Acinetobacter sp. R–C 4 5 6 7 8 Pseudomonas R–C Acinetobacter sp. R–C Pseudomonas, Pseudomonas R–C, Proteus MSSA Acinetobacter sp. R–ACG, Enterococcus MSSA, Enterobacter R–C Streptococcus MRSA 14 15 16 17 18 19 naf, cefx metr, imip, van, linz, cefa cefp cefp, cefx cefp, linz, van cefp gent, van, cip van, cefp imip, pip/taz gati, van cefx, van, azit cefp, gati amp imip van, imip, pip/taz van pip/taz, gent, imip imip gati imip, linz, van, cefp cip, metr, gent, mero metr, van amk, cefz, metr, van Antibiotic Pretherapy naf, cefx metr, imip, van, linz, cefa cefp cefp, cefx cefp, linz, van cefp pip/taz, cip van, cefp, imip cefp azt, ery, van cefx, van cefp, imip, rif, van van pip/taz, van, naf, azt amp, cefp, pip/taz imip, van van, pip/taz gent, imip, mero imip gati cip, metr, gent amp, cefp, metr, van, mero imip, linz, van amk, cefz, metr, van Antibiotic during Therapy 18 17 14 15 16 13 9 10 11 12 6 7 8 5 4 2 3 1 Placebo Patient # Pseudomonas sp. R–AG 14 Acinetobacter sp. Stenotrophomonas Pseudomonas sp. R–C, Enterobacter Pseudomonas sp., Stenotrophomonas Klebsiella R–C, Citrobacter sp. R–C, MRSA Escherichia coli Nl Flora Enterobacter R–C MRSA MRSA, Acinetobacter sp. R–ACG MSSA, Acinetobacter sp. R–ACG MRSA Enterobacter R–C MRSA Acinetobacter sp. R–ACG, MRSA, Klebsiella Pseudomonas sp. MSSA Klebsiella R–C Organisms* van, gent, cefp van, pip/taz, cefp van, pip/taz pip/taz, cefp van, cip, gati clin, dox, gati, cip pip/taz, metr, cefp, van van, gent cefp, van azt, metr, van azt, imp, van gati amp, cefp, van cefp, van Antibiotic Pretherapy metr van, gent, cefp cip bact, van cefp pip/taz, van, gent azt, metr, van imip cefp, van, mero, imip cip, cefp gati cip van, mero imip, van rif, imp, van gati pip/taz, van cefp, van Antibiotic during Therapy Definition of abbreviations: AA = aerosolized antibiotics; amk = amikacin; azt = aztreonam; cefp = cefepime; cefx = ceftriaxone; cefz = ceftazidime; cip = ciprofloxacin; clin = clindamycin; dox = doxycycline; gati = gatifloxacin; gent = gentamicin; imip = imipenem; linz = linezolid; mero = meropenem; metr = metronidazole; MRSA = methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; MSSA = methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus; naf = nafcillin; pip/taz = piperacillin/tazobactam; van = vancomycin. *The organisms’ resistance that qualified these organisms as multidrug resistant is indicated by the following abbreviations: A = amikacin; C = ceftazidime; G = gentamicin; R = resistant. 22 23 24 20 21 MRSA Acinetobacter sp. R–C Klebsiella MSSA MRSA 13 9 10 11 12 Pseudomonas R–C Acinetobacter R–CG Pseudomonas R–AG Organisms* 2 3 1 AA Patient # Table 3: Organisms at Randomization and Systemic Antibiotics before and during Aerosol Therapy ORIGINAL ARTICLE American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine Volume 189 Number 10 | May 15 2014 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Table 4: Microbiologic Response Aerosolized Antibiotics Placebo P Value* 96% (26/27) 88% (14/16) 9% (2/23) 9% (1/11) ,0.0001 ,0.0001 No. of randomization organisms eradicated† No. of patients with eradication of resistant organisms *Fisher exact test. † Resistant and nonresistant organisms. testing for differences between percentages in categorical variables. Unpaired t tests were used for parametric continuous variables. The significance level was fixed at an a level of P less than 0.05. All analyses were performed using SPSS 15 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL) and Prism (GraphPad, La Jolla, CA). Results Table 2 for AA and placebo. Some patients had more than one isolate. Typical respiratory pathogens were distributed throughout both groups with 20 out of 27 isolates defined as MDR for AA and 10 out of 23 isolates defined as MDR for placebo. Table 3 demonstrates the organisms at randomization for each patient and the systemic antibiotics that were given by the physician responsible for their care. Patients Microbiologic Effects The final study sample consisted of 42 men and women ranging in age from 19.0 to 92.0 years. The demographic and clinical data at the time of randomization of the two groups are shown in Table 1. Demographics were similar in the two groups. The APACHE scores in the two groups were significantly different, with the severity of illness being greater in the AA group (20.96 6 5.8 vs. 14.1 6 5.5; P , 0.0007). All other parameters listed in Table 1 including systemic antibiotic appropriateness (defined by susceptibility and at least 5 d of treatment) were similar in the two groups. Bacterial isolates cultured from tracheal aspirates at randomization are listed in Table 4 demonstrates the effects of AA versus placebo aerosols on eradication of bacteria detected at randomization. The data are analyzed for the effect of active versus placebo arm on numbers of isolates at randomization and by the number of patients with MDRO organisms. For the AA group, 26 of the 27 bacterial isolates cultured at randomization were eradicated (e.g., no growth and no organisms on Gram stain) but only 2 of 23 to placebo (P , 0.0001). Analysis of antimicrobial effects specifically on MDRO revealed that 14 of 16 patients treated with AA had eradication of resistant organisms compared with 1 out of 11 with placebo aerosol (P , 0.0001). New resistance to systemic antibiotics is documented in Table 5. These isolates were not seen at randomization. In the AA group one organism each in 2 of 16 patients emerged versus 6 of 11 in the placebo group (P = 0.03). The effect of AA versus placebo on the growth of bacteria during treatment is shown in Figure 2. Thirty-eight of 42 patients had serial cultures. The vertical axis is the “growth factor” of a given isolate, the symbols are individual isolates at the indicated times. This figure demonstrates marked reduction in bacterial growth of all cultures during treatment with AA (Figure 2A) compared with placebo (Figure 2B). No AA patients developed resistance to the AA administered. Nine of the 11 eradicated isolates were undetectable in the first to fourth weeks post-EOT. Different symbols are used for emergence of new resistance to systemic agents. Clinical Effects Table 6 shows the clinical effect of treatment on CPIS, volume of secretions, and systemic WBC count. To determine if Table 5: Systemic Antibiotics and New Resistance during Aerosol Therapy Patients with New Resistance during Treatment AA (n = 16) 2 (13%) Placebo (n = 11) 6 (55%) P value* Patients Aerosolized Treatment Systemic Treatment 1 2 1 2 3 Gentamicin Vancomycin Placebo Placebo Placebo 4 5 Placebo Placebo 6 Placebo Piperacillin/tazobactam Cefepime Imipenem Imipenem Cefepime, meropenem, vancomycin Cefepime, gentamicin Vancomycin, piperacillin/tazobactam Meropenem, vancomycin Organism VRE Enterobacter sp. PA PA Acinetobacter sp. PA Klebsiella pneumoniae, MRSA Enterobacter sp. 0.03 Definition of abbreviations: AA = aerosolized antibiotics; MRSA = methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus; PA = Pseudomonas aeruginosa; VRE = vancomycin-resistant enterococcus. Data from patients with serial cultures throughout the study. *Fisher exact test. Palmer and Smaldone: Inhaled Antibiotics in the ICU 1229 ORIGINAL ARTICLE 24 vs. placebo, 2 of 18; P = 0.43). Deaths were the result of multiorgan system failure. Discussion Figure 2. Bacterial growth from tracheal aspirates obtained at time of randomization, mid treatment (Mid Tx), and at end of treatment (EOT) for (A) aerosolized antibiotics (AA) and (B) placebo. Growth is quantified using a graded scale of 0–4 from semiquantitative cultures: multidrug-resistant gram-negative organisms (filled circles), nonresistant gram-negative organisms (open circles), resistant gram-positive organisms (filled squares), nonresistant gram-positive organisms (open squares), and newly resistant organisms on treatment (X). Some patients had multiple isolates. At Mid Tx all the isolates with zero growth represent organisms detected at randomization that did not grow in isolates sampled at Mid Tx. At EOT the isolates with zero growth represent organisms detected at randomization and Mid Tx that did not grow in samples obtained at EOT. There was a clear difference in pattern of bacterial growth between AA and placebo. Two AA isolates demonstrated persistent growth at EOT: one methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (filled square) that was not eradicated by AA but had no gram-positive cocci on Gram stain, and one persistent Acinetobacter (filled circle) with organisms present on Gram stain. More newly resistant organisms were seen in the placebo group (Table 5). the CPIS effects were primarily caused by changes in bacterial growth in cultures (a potential in vitro effect), we reanalyzed the CPIS score with removal of the points for culture and Gram stain. Treatment effects on this modified CPIS score with AA were still robust (P , 0.001). Other parameters of infection including volume of secretions (P , 0.05) and the systemic WBC (P , 0.028) were significantly reduced with AA. 1230 Total ventilator days were decreased with AA but not significantly (AA vs. placebo, 12.9 6 2.1 vs. 13.5 = 2.1; P = 0.078). Nephrotoxicity was monitored by serial creatinine assessment. No effects were seen (AA: mean 6 SD, randomization, 0.84 6 0.73; end of study, 0.93 6 1.26; P , 0.67) (placebo: randomization, 0.79 6 0.55; end of study, 0.73 6 0.44; P = 0.50). Mortality differences were not significant (AA, 6 of This study shows that inhaled antibiotics can eradicate a chronic pool of MDRO found in the sputum of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU). These effects were demonstrated in a typical tertiary care ICU environment in a population of patients difficult to wean while receiving numerous courses of antibiotics (Table 3) (e.g., patients who harbor MDRO in hospital). Our patients were not merely colonized. In addition to being critically ill as indicated by their APACHE score, they had signs and symptoms of respiratory infection demonstrated by their CPIS score, their high volume of secretions, and their need for systemic antibiotics. Similar amounts of appropriate systemic antibiotics were given in both groups. New resistance to the AA was not seen. However, there was evidence of continuous pressure creating new resistance from systemic agents that was significantly higher in the placebo patients and mitigated by the use of AA. Our main endpoints were microbiologic. Our clinical observations were consistent with those seen in our previous studies. We have found that AA can decrease ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and other signs and symptoms of respiratory infection, facilitate weaning, and reduce use of systemic antibiotics. No new resistance to AA was seen (7, 13). In the present study, we deliberately attempted to treat MDRO from the onset of therapy. Our data suggest that AA reduce the pool of MDRO in the ICU environment. Microbial eradication in AA was associated with a significant decrease in signs of respiratory infection quantified by CPIS. At the time of randomization both groups averaged a CPIS greater than 7, a value consistent with a high likelihood of deep lung infection, rather than colonization, influencing the responsible clinician to use systemic antibiotics. Treatment with AA was associated with a significant drop in CPIS suggesting a low post-treatment risk for deep lung infection. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine Volume 189 Number 10 | May 15 2014 ORIGINAL ARTICLE Table 6: Clinical Response AA (n = 24) CPIS* CPIS w/o culture data‡ Volume per 4 hrx Systemic white blood countjj 9.3 7.5 6.9 17.1 6 6 6 6 Randomization Placebo (n = 18) P Value AA (n = 24) 6 6 6 6 0.5000† 0.9152† 0.12 0.18 5.3 4.9 1.1 13.3 2.7 2.1 4.7 1.9 8.0 7.1 8.9 12.6 2.1 2.6 0.69 1.2 6 6 6 6 EOT Placebo (n = 18) P Value 6 6 6 6 0.0008† 0.0546† ,0.001 0.726 2.6 2.2 1.3 1.3 8.6 6.3 6.3 13.9 2.6 2.0 4.3 1.5 Definition of abbreviations: AA = aerosolized antibiotics; CPIS = Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score; EOT = end of treatment. *P , 0.0001. † Mann-Whitney test. ‡ P , 0.0001. x P , 0.0500. jj P , 0.0280. Wilcoxon analyses: AA randomization versus AA EOT,*,‡,x,jj; placebo randomization versus placebo EOT, not significant for any parameters in table. CPIS for the placebo group was unchanged despite equivalent use of appropriate systemic antibiotics. Therefore, differences in treatment effect are attributable to AA treatment, not systemic antibiotic effect. AA may facilitate reduction in use of systemic agents. This new concept needs to be tested in future studies. We do not believe our results were caused by differences in systemic antibiotics between groups. In Table 7 we summarize all the antibiotics used for each patient before and after aerosol therapy was instituted and compared with antibiotic days per patient. By inspection, the distribution of antibiotic coverage between groups seems to be broad in gram-positive and gram-negative coverage for MDRO. Quantification of these results by antibiotics per day in the 2 weeks before randomization and during the treatment period demonstrated no significant difference between the two groups. American Thoracic Society guidelines from 2005 recommend inhaled antibiotics for VAP caused by MDRO only when intravenous antibiotics have failed (11). Since those guidelines were written there have been numerous retrospective, prospective, and three randomized controlled trials using these agents as adjuncts or as primary therapy to treat VAP caused by highly resistant organisms (13, 15–26). Few provide data on eradication of organisms or details of the delivery device and expected aerosol deposition. Lu and coworkers (15) compared systemic antibiotics with the same antibiotics delivered by inhalation for VAP. Treatment with systemic antibiotics led to increased resistance to the drugs given, whereas AA did not (7). None of the reported studies of inhaled antibiotics were designed to eliminate a chronic pool of resistant organisms. Our approach to therapy with inhaled antibiotics has been previously described (7, 12, 13). It is important to note that the device used was well characterized for particle size, efficiency, and deposition with demonstrated high concentrations of drug in airway secretions (7). Thus, we could carefully control the conditions of delivery ensuring highest concentrations of antibiotic in the airways. Limitations Our microbiologic response endpoints included presence of organisms on Gram stain and semiquantitative culture of tracheal aspirates, not a formal quantitative culture. However, for microbiologically proved Table 7: Systemic Antibiotic Days Patients 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Mean SD P value Palmer and Smaldone: Inhaled Antibiotics in the ICU Preantibiotic Days per Patient Aerosolized Antibiotics Placebo 32 43 28 26 0 1 28 3 29 0 4 5 11 10 7 20 15 23 2 0 20 9 11 29 14.83 12.51 17 6 30 21 0 5 0 28 12 13 12 20 3 10 0 23 37 0 13.17 11.42 0.7287 During Antibiotic Days per Patient Aerosolized Antibiotics Placebo 40 23 21 30 1 10 30 2 8 31 15 20 33 6 18 21 12 8 10 6 26 5 12 28 17.33 10.99 24 1 19 30 4 25 11 30 2 2 10 20 36 9 15 6 11 8 14.61 10.81 0.4159 1231 ORIGINAL ARTICLE pneumonia, it has been shown that Gram stains without organisms have a negative predictive value of 94% for respiratory infection and correlate with less than 105 CFU/ ml from cultures of tracheal aspirates (27–29). The eradication of bacteria at EOT could be attributed to in vitro suppression of bacterial growth (as opposed to death of bacteria) by high concentrations of antibiotic in the sputum. However, the absence of organisms on Gram stain with AA confirms a very low bacterial burden. Furthermore, although our protocol was not designed to follow serial cultures after the EOT, in the AA group, cultures in the first and fourth weeks post-treatment were available in nine patients (11 isolates). In 9 of the 11 isolates defined at EOT as “eradicated,” bacteria were undetectable in both culture and Gram stain. In an earlier study in tracheostomy patients treated with AA for Pseudomonas aeruginosa tracheobronchitis, recurrence of colonization took 3 weeks post-treatment in most patients (12). Finally, in previous work we have shown that AA facilitates extubation supporting an important clinical effect that would not occur if resistance to AA treatment emerged during therapy. These observations led us to the current study, a first attempt to further define AA as direct therapy for MDRO. Future studies should be designed to confirm these observations. They should include both respiratory and nonrespiratory sites to determine overall effect on antibiotic resistance in the ICU. The difference in baseline APACHE scores between the AA and placebo groups at randomization was unexplained, with AA more severely ill by this criterion. Although the reason for this is not known, our References 1. Boucher HW, Talbot GH, Bradley JS, Edwards JE, Gilbert D, Rice LB, Scheld M, Spellberg B, Bartlett J. Bad bugs, no drugs: no ESCAPE! An update from the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin Infect Dis 2009;48:1–12. 2. Falagas ME, Kasiakou SK. Colistin: the revival of polymyxins for the management of multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacterial infections. Clin Infect Dis 2005;40:1333–1341. 3. Peterson LR. Bad bugs, no drugs: no ESCAPE revisited. 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Aerosolized antibiotics in critically ill ventilated patients. Curr Opin Crit Care 2009;15:413–418. 9. Falagas ME, Tansarli GS, Rafailidis PI, Kapaskelis A, Vardakas KZ. Impact of antibiotic MIC on infection outcome in patients with susceptible gram-negative bacteria: a systematic review and metaanalysis. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2012;56:4214–4222. 10. Niederman MS, Chastre J, Corkery K, Fink JB, Luyt CE, Garc ı́a MS. BAY41-6551 achieves bactericidal tracheal aspirate amikacin concentrations in mechanically ventilated patients with gram-negative pneumonia. Intensive Care Med 2012;38: 263–271. 11. American Thoracic Society; Infectious Diseases Society of America. Guidelines for the management of adults with hospital-acquired, ventilator-associated, and healthcare-associated pneumonia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2005;171:388–416. 12. Palmer LB, Smaldone GC, Simon SR, O’Riordan TG, Cuccia A. Aerosolized antibiotics in mechanically ventilated patients: delivery and response. Crit Care Med 1998;26:31–39. 1232 findings demonstrate that the more severely ill AA group had a robust microbiologic and clinical response, superior to placebo despite this elevated score. Conclusions Inhaled antibiotics eradicated resistant organisms in tracheal secretions and reduced the development of new resistance to systemic agents. No resistance to the inhaled drug emerged. CPIS was significantly improved in AA compared with placebo. Larger clinical trials confirming these findings are needed. n Author disclosures are available with the text of this article at www.atsjournals.org. Acknowledgment: The authors thank Lorraine Morra for her technical assistance and Roger Grimson, Ph.D., for his contribution to the statistical analysis. 13. Palmer LB, Smaldone GC, Chen JJ, Baram D, Duan T, Monteforte M, Varela M, Tempone AK, O’Riordan T, Daroowalla F, et al. Aerosolized antibiotics and ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis in the intensive care unit. 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