Oral versus Intravenous Antibiotics for Bone and Joint Infection.

Ho-Kwong Li; Ines Rombach; Rhea Zambellas; A Sarah Walker; Martin A McNally; Bridget L Atkins; Benjamin A Lipsky; Harriet C Hughes; Deepa Bose; Michelle Kümin; +50 more... Claire Scarborough; Philippa C Matthews; Andrew J Brent; Jose Lomas; Roger Gundle; Mark Rogers; Adrian Taylor; Brian Angus; Ivor Byren; Anthony R Berendt; Simon Warren; Fiona E Fitzgerald; Damien JF Mack; Susan Hopkins; Jonathan Folb; Helen E Reynolds; Elinor Moore; Jocelyn Marshall; Neil Jenkins; Christopher E Moran; Andrew F Woodhouse; Samantha Stafford; R Andrew Seaton; Claire Vallance; Carolyn J Hemsley; Karen Bisnauthsing; Jonathan AT Sandoe; Ila Aggarwal; Simon C Ellis; Deborah J Bunn; Rebecca K Sutherland; Gavin Barlow; Cushla Cooper; Claudia Geue; Nicola McMeekin; Andrew H Briggs ORCID logo; Parham Sendi; Elham Khatamzas; Tri Wangrangsimakul; TH Nicholas Wong; Lucinda K Barrett; Abtin Alvand; C Fraser Old; Jennifer Bostock; John Paul; Graham Cooke; Guy E Thwaites; Philip Bejon; Matthew Scarborough; OVIVA Trial Collaborators; (2019) Oral versus Intravenous Antibiotics for Bone and Joint Infection. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 380 (5). pp. 425-436. ISSN 0028-4793 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1710926
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BACKGROUND: The management of complex orthopedic infections usually includes a prolonged course of intravenous antibiotic agents. We investigated whether oral antibiotic therapy is noninferior to intravenous antibiotic therapy for this indication. METHODS: We enrolled adults who were being treated for bone or joint infection at 26 U.K. centers. Within 7 days after surgery (or, if the infection was being managed without surgery, within 7 days after the start of antibiotic treatment), participants were randomly assigned to receive either intravenous or oral antibiotics to complete the first 6 weeks of therapy. Follow-on oral antibiotics were permitted in both groups. The primary end point was definitive treatment failure within 1 year after randomization. In the analysis of the risk of the primary end point, the noninferiority margin was 7.5 percentage points. RESULTS: Among the 1054 participants (527 in each group), end-point data were available for 1015 (96.3%). Treatment failure occurred in 74 of 506 participants (14.6%) in the intravenous group and 67 of 509 participants (13.2%) in the oral group. Missing end-point data (39 participants, 3.7%) were imputed. The intention-to-treat analysis showed a difference in the risk of definitive treatment failure (oral group vs. intravenous group) of -1.4 percentage points (90% confidence interval [CI], -4.9 to 2.2; 95% CI, -5.6 to 2.9), indicating noninferiority. Complete-case, per-protocol, and sensitivity analyses supported this result. The between-group difference in the incidence of serious adverse events was not significant (146 of 527 participants [27.7%] in the intravenous group and 138 of 527 [26.2%] in the oral group; P=0.58). Catheter complications, analyzed as a secondary end point, were more common in the intravenous group (9.4% vs. 1.0%). CONCLUSIONS: Oral antibiotic therapy was noninferior to intravenous antibiotic therapy when used during the first 6 weeks for complex orthopedic infection, as assessed by treatment failure at 1 year. (Funded by the National Institute for Health Research; OVIVA Current Controlled Trials number, ISRCTN91566927 .).


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