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Efficacy of caspofungin combined with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole as first‑line therapy to treat non‑HIV patients with severe pneumocystis pneumonia
Author(s) -
Gensheng Zhang,
Miaomiao Chen,
Shufang Zhang,
Hongwei Zhou,
Xiaozhen Ji,
Jiachang Cai,
Tianzheng Lou,
Wei Cui,
Ning Zhang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
experimental and therapeutic medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1792-1015
pISSN - 1792-0981
DOI - 10.3892/etm.2017.5516
Subject(s) - caspofungin , pneumocystis pneumonia , medicine , retrospective cohort study , trimethoprim , sulfamethoxazole , salvage therapy , pneumonia , mechanical ventilation , pneumocystis carinii , pneumocystis jirovecii , mortality rate , first line therapy , surgery , chemotherapy , biology , voriconazole , antibiotics , antifungal , microbiology and biotechnology , dermatology
Combined treatment with caspofungin and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMZ) as salvage therapy in non-HIV positive patients with severe pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) yields poor outcomes. It remains unknown whether the use of this combination strategy as a first-line therapy would improve patient outcomes. The present study aimed to assess the efficacy of caspofungin combined with TMP/SMZ as a first-line therapy in non-HIV positive patients with severe PCP. A retrospective cohort study was conducted between March 2016 and February 2017. Patient clinical characteristics and outcomes were compared between two groups receiving first-line and second-line therapy respectively. In addition, similar cases from previous studies were assessed. A total of 14 patients were included in the present study (mean age, 58.79±14.41 years); including 9 patients receiving caspofungin and TMP/SMZ as a first-line therapy and 5 that received it as a second-line therapy. The overall positive response rate was 71.43% (10/14), with 88.89 (8/9) and 40.00% (2/5) in the first-line and second-line therapy groups, respectively (P=0.095). The positive response rates of patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation differed significantly between the first-line (5/6, 83.33%) and the second-line (0/3, 0%) therapy groups (P=0.048). All-cause hospital mortality was 42.86% (6/14), with mortality rates of 33.33 (3/9) and 60.00% (3/5) in the first-line and second-line therapy groups, respectively (P=0.580). Combined with previously reported cases (n=27), the positive response rate was significantly greater in the first-line therapy group (11/12, 91.67%) than in the second-line therapy group (8/15, 53.33%, P=0.043). No significant differences were in all-cause mortality rates between the two groups (25.00 vs. 46.67%, P=0.424) were identified, despite the fact that all-course mortality in the first-line therapy group was ~50% that of the second-line therapy group. Therefore, the results of the present study indicate that combined caspofungin and TMP/SMZ as first-line therapy may be a promising and effective strategy to treat non-HIV positive patients with severe PCP, particularly for those requiring invasive mechanical ventilation.

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