To date, many studies showed the great benefits of switching from IV to PO antibiotics in some infectious diseases, especially skin and soft tissue, urinary tract, respiratory tract, gallbladder, and biliary tract infection. Higher level of evidence is necessary to confirm the benefit of early switching protocol in infectious condition management. Therefore, we conducted a clinical trial to investigate the effectiveness and cost of IV-to-PO antibiotic switch therapy in some surgical infection conditions.
Introduction: The benefit of early switching from intravenous (IV) to oral (PO)was raising from the last decade. This randomized clinical trial was to evaluate the effect of early switching from IV to PO antibiotics on the outcome of surgical patients at a public hospital. Methods: Patients admitted for a therapeutic antibiotic to orthopedic and general surgery conditions were randomly assigned to three groups: control (non-switching), early switching (within 48-72 hours), and late switching (after 72 hours). The rate of effectiveness of each arm, length of hospital stay, length of IV antibiotics, and cost were recorded prospectively.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
210
IV-to-PO switching of antibiotics treatment
Gia Dinh people hospital
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
rate of effectiveness
rate of effectiveness of the infection treatment
Time frame: 3 months
length of hospital stay
length of hospital stay after starting the antibiotic treatment
Time frame: 3 months
length of IV antibiotics
length of IV antibiotics usage
Time frame: 3 months
cost of treatment
cost of antibiotics
Time frame: 3 months
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