The primary aims of this study are to identify and characterize the immediate consequences of patients who fail fluconazole treatment during the treatment of severe infection, and to determine if fluconazole failures are more frequently associated with fluconazole-resistant or fluconazole-susceptible strains of C. albicans.
The primary aims of this study are to identify and characterize the immediate consequences of patients who fail fluconazole treatment during the treatment of severe infection, and to determine if fluconazole failures are more frequently associated with fluconazole-resistant or fluconazole-susceptible strains of C. albicans (i.e. does in vitro resistance matter?). Perhaps the breakpoints are not correct and need to be changed, as has recently happened with vancomycin. A third objective is to calculate fluconazole PK/PD parameters such as AUIC, and compare the calculated AUIC values of patients who fail with fluconazole-susceptible vs fluconazole-resistant isolates. Specifically for fluconazole, the question here is whether dose matters, and can aggressive dosing offset higher MICs. Thus in all cases, we will also determine the AUIC of fluconazole in order to fully characterize the impact of dose chosen on the outcomes of treated patients who fail to respond to fluconazole. The clinical, microbiological, and pharmacoeconomic outcomes of patients who fail fluconazole therapy and are subsequently hospitalized with severe infections caused by C. albicans will be documented and described.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
28
Patients hospitalized with severe infection caused by C. albicans, documented by standard clinical signs, symptoms, and radiology, and having failed at least four days of fluconazole therapy
CPL Associates,LLC
Buffalo, New York, United States
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.