Abstract
Background
The choice of antibiotic, and the use of single or combined therapy are controversial areas in the treatment of respiratory infection due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis (CF). Advantages of combination therapy include wider range of modes of action, possible synergy and reduction of resistant organisms; advantages of monotherapy include lower cost, ease of administration and reduction of drug‐related toxicity. Current evidence does not provide a clear answer and the use of intravenous antibiotic therapy in CF requires further evaluation. This is an update of a previously published review.
Objectives
To assess the effectiveness of single compared to combination intravenous anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy for treating people with CF.
Search methods
We searched the Cochrane Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Group Trials Register, comprising references identified from comprehensive electronic database searches and handsearches of relevant journals and abstract books of conference proceedings.
Most recent search of the Group's Trials Register: 07 October 2020.
We also searched online trials registries on 16 November 2020.
Selection criteria
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing a single intravenous anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic with a combination of that antibiotic plus a second anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic in people with CF.
Data collection and analysis
Two authors independently assessed trial quality and extracted data. We assessed the certainty of the data using GRADE.
Main results
We identified 59 trials, of which we included eight trials (356 participants) comparing a single anti‐pseudomonal agent to a combination of the same antibiotic and one other. There was a wide variation in the individual antibiotics used in each trial. In total, the trials included seven comparisons of a beta‐lactam antibiotic (penicillin‐related or third generation cephalosporin) with a beta‐lactam‐aminoglycoside combination and three comparisons of an aminoglycoside with a beta‐lactam‐aminoglycoside combination.
There was considerable heterogeneity amongst these trials, leading to difficulties in performing the review and interpreting the results. These results should be interpreted cautiously. Six of the included trials were published between 1977 and 1988; these were single‐centre trials with flaws in the randomisation process and small sample size. Overall, the methodological quality was poor and the certainty of the evidence ranged from low to moderate.
The review did not find any differences between monotherapy and combination therapy in either the short term or in the long term for the outcomes of different lung function measures, bacteriological outcome measures, need for additional treatment, adverse effects, quality of life or symptom scores.
Authors' conclusions
The results of this review are inconclusive. The review raises important methodological issues. There is a need for an RCT which needs to be well‐designed in terms of adequate randomisation allocation, blinding, power and long‐term follow‐up. Results need to be standardised to a consistent method of reporting, in order to validate the pooling of results from multiple trials.
Plain language summary
A comparison of single and combined intravenous drug therapy for people with cystic fibrosis infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Review question
We reviewed the evidence about the different effects of using a single intravenous (given directly into a vein) antibiotic compared to using a combination of intravenous antibiotics in people with cystic fibrosis infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Background
Cystic fibrosis is a serious genetic disease that affects cells in the exocrine glands (sweat glands and others). People with cystic fibrosis have a greater risk of chronic lung infections, often due to bacteria called Pseudomonas aeruginosa. They receive antibiotics, either a single drug or a combination of different drugs, given into a vein to treat these infections. Both the choice of antibiotic and the use of single or combined therapy vary. We looked for randomised controlled trials which compared a single intravenous antibiotic with a combination of that antibiotic plus another one in people with cystic fibrosis. This is an updated version of the review.
Search date
The evidence is current to: 07 October 2020.
Study characteristics
We included eight trials with a total of 356 people. Six of these were published before 1988, were each based in a single centre and used a range of different drugs. These factors made it difficult to combine and analyse the results.
Key results
We did not find any differences between the two therapies for lung function, bacteriological outcomes, side effects or symptom scores. We do not think that there is enough evidence to compare the different therapies properly. More research is needed, particularly looking at side effects of treatment.
Quality of the evidence
We judged the certainty of the evidence to be low to moderate. Six of the included trials were quite old (published between 1977 and 1988). They did not include many people and had flaws in the way the people taking part were put into the different treatment groups. Overall, the quality of the trials' design was poor.
Summary of findings
Background
Description of the condition
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common life‐limiting inherited disorder affecting populations of Northern European descent (Farrell 2018), with chronic, progressive lung disease being the major cause of morbidity and shortened survival. The continuous cycle of infection and inflammation is responsible for the severe airway damage and loss of respiratory function (Cantin 1995; Gibson 2003).
Recurrent infection, in particular with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, is the main feature of the lung involvement in CF. Antibiotic therapy may be utilised with the aim of preventing, eradicating, or controlling respiratory infections (Castellani 2018; UK CF Trust 2009).
Description of the intervention
Currently, treatment of chronic P aeruginosa infection in people with CF usually involves one of the following strategies. One approach is to use intravenous (IV) antibiotics to treat people with CF only when they become acutely unwell, on the grounds of clinical, radiological or pulmonary function parameters (subsequently referred to as symptomatic regimen). Alternatively, chronic infection may be treated with elective IV antibiotics at regular intervals (e.g. three‐monthly) (Hoiby 1993), with the aim of preventing long‐term deterioration (subsequently referred to as an elective regimen). Trials using either of these strategies will be considered for this review, if the same strategy was used for treatment and comparison groups.
Choice of antibiotic, single or combined therapy and the duration of treatment are contentious areas in the treatment of infection with IV antibiotics in CF. Administration of IV antibiotic therapy for a period of around two weeks is standard practice for treatment of pulmonary infections in most CF centres. Current guidelines acknowledge that this is current practice, but note that evidence is lacking (Castellani 2018; UK CF Trust 2009). Treatment of P aeruginosa is complicated by discordance between antibiotic susceptibility pattern and clinical response (Smith 2003).
How the intervention might work
Most centres perceive dual or combination IV antibiotic therapy in CF to be more effective than single therapy. with the possibility that combination therapy may offer antibiotic synergy (Saiman 1996). It has been suggested that a clinic policy of using monotherapy with a beta‐lactam antibiotic may be responsible for the emergence of resistant strains of P aeruginosa (Cheng 1996). However, the use of a beta‐lactam alone offers advantages for the individual because of ease of administration and the avoidance of aminoglycoside related toxicities (Prayle 2010).
Why it is important to do this review
Intravenous antibiotic therapy may have contributed to improved survival among people with CF; however, the multiple use of potent and highly selective antibiotics may increase the likelihood of adverse effects and lead to the development of resistant strains of organisms (Levy 1998). This version of the review is an update of previous review versions (Elphick 2002; Elphick 2005; Elphick 2014).
Objectives
1. To assess the effectiveness of single compared to combination IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy in the treatment of people with CF. 2. To assess whether the use of combination IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy leads to an increase in adverse effects or the development of resistant strains of organisms in CF.
Methods
Criteria for considering studies for this review
Types of studies
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs). We included trials using quasi‐randomisation methods such as alternation, if there was sufficient evidence that the treatment and comparison groups were comparable in terms of clinical status at baseline.
Types of participants
Children and adults with defined CF, diagnosed clinically and by sweat or genetic testing, with all degrees of disease severity.
Types of interventions
Trials of any single IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic compared to a combination of the same IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic plus one or more other IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotics (drug A versus drug A plus drug B). Trials which compared a single anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic agent with a combination of two further anti‐pseudomonal antibiotics (drug A versus drug B plus drug C) were not included. Symptomatic and elective regimens (see above) were both eligible for inclusion if the only difference between the treatment and comparison group was whether the participants received single or combination antibiotic therapy.
Types of outcome measures
We aimed to assess whether a combination of IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotics is more effective than a single IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic for clinical, bacteriological and subjective changes and in adverse events. Outcomes differed between short‐term results (i.e. at end of course of antibiotics) and long‐term results (measured at 6 to 12 months after course of antibiotics; if long‐term outcomes are measured at other time intervals, we will also consider these).
Short‐term results
Primary outcomes
-
Spirometric lung function
forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1)
forced vital capacity (FVC)
other measures of lung function
-
Sputum bacteriology
eradicaton of P aeruginosa
bacterial concentration
antibiotic sensitivity
Adverse effects to antibiotics, e.g. renal and auditory impairment, serum sickness and sensitivity reactions
Secondary outcomes
Quality of life (QoL) assessment
-
Nutritional status
change in weight
change in body mass index (BMI)
change in z score
other indices of nutritional status
Additional treatment required
Duration of hospitalisation
Time to next course of IV antibiotics
-
Clinical status
chest X‐ray scores
other symptom scores, e.g. Schwachman score
Changes in inflammatory markers (in sputum or blood)
Long‐term results
Primary outcomes
Change in lung function (prevention of deterioration of lung function)
Development of antibiotic‐resistant strains of P aeruginosa and other organisms
Adverse effects to antibiotics, e.g. renal and auditory impairment, serum sickness and sensitivity reactions
Secondary outcomes
QoL assessment
Number of courses of IV antibiotics in the following year
Search methods for identification of studies
The authors did not restrict results by language or publication status.
Electronic searches
The authors identified relevant trials from the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register using the terms: antibiotics AND intravenous.
The Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register is compiled from electronic searches of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (Clinical Trials) (updated each new issue of the Cochrane Library), weekly searches of MEDLINE, a search of Embase to 1995 and the prospective handsearching of two journals ‐ Pediatric Pulmonology and the Journal of Cystic Fibrosis. Unpublished work is identified by searching the abstract books of three major cystic fibrosis conferences: the International Cystic Fibrosis Conference; the European Cystic Fibrosis Conference and the North American Cystic Fibrosis Conference. For full details of all searching activities for the register, please see the relevant sections of the Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Group website.
Date of the most recent search of the Group's CF Trials Register: 07 October 2020.
Authors also searched the following online study registries for relevant ongoing trials; please see the appendices for the search strategies (Appendix 1):
US National Institutes of Health Ongoing Trials Register Clinicaltrials.gov (www.clinicaltrials.gov; 2000 to present);
World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (WHO ICTRP) (apps.who.int/trialsearch; 1994 to present).
Date of latest search: 16 November 2020.
Searching other resources
The authors checked the reference lists of the identified trials for other possibly relevant trials.
Data collection and analysis
Selection of studies
Two review authors independently reviewed all trials to select which were to be included in the review. If disagreement arose on the suitability of a trial for inclusion in the review, the authors reached a consensus by discussion.
Data extraction and management
Each review author independently extracted data using standard data acquisition forms. If disagreement arose on the quality of a trial, the authors reached a consensus by discussion.
If there had been sufficient numbers of trials using quasi‐randomisation methods, then the authors would have analysed this group separately.
The authors grouped data into short‐term results and long‐term results. They defined short‐term results as those at the end of the course of antibiotics (between 10 and 14 days); they considered long‐term results to be six to 12 months after the course of antibiotics. The authors planned to also consider other time intervals if these are reported. In the review the review authors report data at the end of the course of antibiotics (between 10 and 14 days), at two to eight weeks and at 80 days.
For binary outcome measures the authors recorded the number of events and the number of participants for each group. For continuous outcomes, the authors recorded either the mean change from baseline for each group or mean post‐treatment or intervention values and the standard deviation (SD) or standard error (SE) for each group.
Assessment of risk of bias in included studies
In order to establish a risk of bias for each trial, the authors independently assessed the methodological quality of each trial. In particular, authors examined details of the randomisation method (generation and concealment of allocation), the degree of blinding in the trial, whether intention‐to‐treat analyses were possible from the available data and if the investigators recorded the number of participants lost to follow‐up or subsequently excluded from the trial.
Measures of treatment effect
For binary outcome measures, the authors calculated a pooled estimate of the treatment effect for each outcome across trials using the Peto odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) where appropriate. For continuous outcomes, the authors calculated a pooled estimate of treatment effect by calculating the mean difference (MD) with 95% CIs.
Unit of analysis issues
The authors included one cross‐over trial in the review (Pedersen 1986). Ideally when conducting a meta‐analysis combining results from cross‐over trials the authors would have liked to use the inverse variance methods that are recommended by Elbourne (Elbourne 2002). However, due to restrictions on the data that were available from the included trial, the only method that they have been able to use was to treat the cross‐over trial as if it was a parallel trial (assuming a correlation of zero as the most conservative estimate). Elbourne says that this approach produces conservative results as it does not take into account within‐patient correlation (Elbourne 2002). Also each participant appears in both the treatment and control group, so the two groups are not independent.
Dealing with missing data
In order to allow an intention‐to‐treat analysis, the review authors collected data on the number of participants with each outcome event by allocated treatment group, irrespective of compliance and whether or not the participant was later thought to be ineligible or otherwise excluded from treatment or follow‐up. They planned to contact the primary investigators for clarification of data if needed.
Assessment of heterogeneity
Review authors planned to measure the inconsistency of trial results using the Chi² test and the I²heterogeneity statistic to determine if variation in outcomes across trials was due to trial heterogeneity rather than chance (Higgins 2003). This Chi² test assesses whether observed differences in results are compatible with chance alone. A low P value (or a large Chi² statistic relative to its degree of freedom) provides evidence of heterogeneity of intervention effects (variation in effect estimates beyond chance). A P value of 0.10, rather than the conventional level of 0.05, is used to determine statistical significance.
The I²statistic, as defined by Higgins (Higgins 2017), measures heterogeneity as a percentage where a value:
0% to 40%: might not be important;
30% to 60%: may represent moderate heterogeneity;
50% to 90%: may represent substantial heterogeneity;
75% to 100%: considerable heterogeneity.
The importance of the observed value of I² depends on (i) magnitude and direction of effects and (ii) strength of evidence for heterogeneity (e.g. P value from the Chi² test, or a confidence interval for I²).
Assessment of reporting biases
The review authors assessed selective outcome reporting as detailed above (Assessment of risk of bias in included studies). If they had been able to combine at least 10 trials, they would have assessed publication bias by generating a funnel plot (Sterne 2017).
Data synthesis
The review authors analysed the data using a fixed‐effect model. If they had identified at least substantial heterogeneity (as defined above), they would have analysed the data using a random‐effects model.
Subgroup analysis and investigation of heterogeneity
If the review authors had included and combined sufficient trials and identified at least substantial heterogeneity (as defined above), they planned to carry out subgroup analyses of adults separately from children; of participants on a symptomatic regimen separately from those on an elective regimen; and also of those who were colonised with P aeruginosa (i.e. those people with CF who are sputum positive on three consecutive occasions) separately from those who were not colonised.
While the authors were unable to conduct a formal subgroup analysis, they have presented the results of the single trial of elective treatment (reported as median and range) separately in an additional table (Pedersen 1986).
Sensitivity analysis
The review authors planned to perform a sensitivity analysis based on the methodological quality of the trials, removing any trial which had a high risk of bias in any domain.
Summary of findings and assessment of the certainty of the evidence
The authors have prepared a summary of findings table for each comparison presented in the review. They listed each population, setting, intervention and comparison and reported an illustrative risk for the experimental and control intervention. They graded the overall certainty of the body of evidence as high, moderate, low or very low using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) (Schuneman 2006). The authors based their judgements on the risk of bias within the trials, their relevance to the population of interest (indirectness), unexplained heterogeneity or inconsistency, imprecision of the results or high risk of publication bias. They downgraded the evidence once if the risk was serious and twice if the risk was deemed to be very serious and described the rationale for each judgement in footnotes to each table. For each comparison they reported the following outcomes.
Change in FEV1 % predicted at end of antibiotic course
Change in FEV1 % predicted at six months
Change in sputum P aeruginosa density (CFU/g) at end of antibiotic course
Additional treatment required
Time to next course of antibiotics
Adverse events during antibiotic course
QoL
Results
Description of studies
Please see the tables for additional information (Characteristics of included studies; Characteristics of excluded studies).
Results of the search
The searches identified a total of 59 trials; no trials were found through contact with pharmaceutical companies. The authors included eight trials in the review and excluded 51 trials.
Included studies
Eight trials (including 356 participants) are included in this review; of these two were published only as abstracts in conference proceedings (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982).
Trial design
Seven trials were described as RCTs (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Master 1997; McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999). In the remaining trial, treatment was assigned using alternate allocation with good evidence of similar groups at baseline (Parry 1977). This trial was included as a quasi‐RCT.
Seven trials of symptomatic treatment employed a parallel group design (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Master 1997; McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977; Smith 1999). The remaining trial of elective treatment every three months used a cross‐over design (Pedersen 1986).
Participants
In seven trials, participants were enrolled during a pulmonary exacerbation (symptomatic regimen) (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Master 1997; McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977; Smith 1999). In the remaining trial, participants were treated using a three‐monthly elective regimen and were re‐entered into the trial during consecutive courses of antibiotics in a cross‐over design (Pedersen 1986). In five of the trials, evidence of P aeruginosa in the sputum was an inclusion requirement (Costantini 1982; Master 1997; Parry 1977; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999); of the remaining three trials, one stated that 98% had P aeruginosa (McLaughlin 1983).
Only one trial stated the criteria for diagnosis of CF (Smith 1999). Sample size varied from 16 participants (Huang 1982) to 83 participants (Master 1997), with a total of 356 participants recruited across all eight trials. All trials either stated that they included both adults and children, or did not state the age range. No trial looked at the effects of single versus combination antibiotic therapy in children alone. One trial included 17 children, but included three children twice, giving a total of 20 treatment courses (McCarty 1988). Similarly, a further two trials reported on participants with multiple admissions a higher number of admissions than participants (Costantini 1982; Master 1997).
Interventions
Treatment duration varied from 10 to 14 days. Three trials included a follow‐up period, which varied from two to eight weeks (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999) to six months for the cross‐over trial (Pedersen 1986).
There was a wide variation in the individual antibiotics used in each trial (seePublished notes: Description of pharmacological properties of antibiotics used). Two trials made two comparisons, therefore, in total, the eight trials included seven comparisons of a beta‐lactam antibiotic (penicillin‐related or third generation cephalosporin) to a beta‐lactam‐aminoglycoside combination and three comparisons of an aminoglycoside to a beta‐lactam‐aminoglycoside combination. We did not analyse these two groups of trials separately due to insufficient data.
Two trials compared two single agents with the combination of the same two antibiotics: carbenicillin versus sisomycin versus carbenicillin and sisomycin (Costantini 1982); ticarcillin versus gentamicin versus ticarcillin and gentamicin (Parry 1977). One other trial looked at an aminoglycoside as the single agent: tobramycin versus tobramycin and ceftazidime (Master 1997). Of the remaining five trials, one studied ceftazidime as the single agent (compared to ceftazidime with tobramycin (Pedersen 1986)) and the remaining four compared an agent from the penicillin group of antibiotics: piperacillin (McCarty 1988); ticarcillin (Huang 1982); azlocillin (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999) with a combination of that agent with tobramycin.
Outcome measures
Outcomes were studied at the end of the treatment course in all trials.
Five trials reported on lung function: mean FEV1 % predicted and FVC % predicted at the end of the treatment course (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999); the mean change from baseline in FEV1 % predicted and FVC % predicted (Master 1997); and median (range) FEV1 % predicted and FVC % predicted at baseline, end of treatment and follow‐up (Pedersen 1986). One trial measured FEV1 and FVC, but did not specify the unit of measurement (McCarty 1988). Two trials undertook a number of other specified lung function measurements (mean RV % predicted, mean TLC % predicted, mean RV/TLC % predicted, mean PFR % predicted and mean MMEF % predicted) (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999). Additionally, one trial fed pulmonary function into a clinical scoring system, but did not specify the actual outcome measures or report the pulmonary function results (Huang 1982) and one trial describes performing pulmonary function tests when possible, but does not define what these were (Parry 1977).
Three trials reported on Schwachman score (McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977); one trial reported exacerbation scores (Smith 1999); one trial reported a combination clinical score (Costantini 1982) and a further trial devised their own composite clinical score (Huang 1982).
Three trials reported on eradication of P aeruginosa (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Pedersen 1986), two trials reported on the change in P aeruginosa density (McCarty 1988; Smith 1999) and one trial reported on a change in sputum bacterial concentration (McLaughlin 1983). Six trials reported adverse events (Costantini 1982; Master 1997; McCarty 1988; Parry 1977; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999).
Two trials reported of nutrition (Parry 1977; McCarty 1988). Two trials reported on hospitalisations (Huang 1982; Smith 1999) and two trials on the time to next course of antibiotics (McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977). Three trials reported short‐term changes in chest X‐ray scores (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Parry 1977). One trial reported sputum markers of inflammation (Smith 1999) and three trials reported blood markers of inflammation (Parry 1977; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999). Six of the eight trials examined sputum for drug sensitivity at the beginning and at the end of treatment (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999).
One trial included longer‐term results and reported no difference in pulmonary function tests or NIH scores (Master 1997).
Excluded studies
A total of 51 trials were excluded. In 11 trials a single antibiotic agent was compared with a combination of two other antibiotics (drug A versus drug B plus drug C) (Balsamo 1986; Beaudry 1980; Bosso 1988; Church 1997; De Boeck 1989; De Boeck 1999; Gold 1985; Jewett 1985; Permin 1983; Stack 1985; Wesley 1988). Different dosage regimens of the same antibiotic were compared in 16 trials (Adeboyeku 2011; Al‐Ansari 2006; Aminimanizani 2002; Beringer 2012; Conway 1997; Hubert 2009; Keel 2011; McCabe 2013; Prayle 2016; Noah 2010; NCT01667094; NCT01694069; Riethmueller 2009; Semykin 2010; Turner 2013; Whitehead 2002). Two trials compared different durations of IV antibiotics (NCT01044719; STOP 2 2018). Three trials were excluded as they compared two single drugs (Al‐Aloul 2004; Levy 1982; NCT02918409 ). One trial compared two IV antibiotics to those same antibiotics plus an inhaled antibiotic (Al‐Aloul 2019) and one trial compared a single IV antibiotic to a combination of IV and inhaled antibiotics (NCT03066453). A further trial had a similar design but the third antibiotic in the comparator group was identified through examination of the microbiome and it was not specified how this third antibiotic was administered (CFMATTERS 2017). Similarly, one trial compared IV antibiotic treatment identified by standard testing to treatment identified from biofilm susceptibility testing (Moskowitz 2011). One trial compared an IV regimen to control (Enaud 2017) and one trial as investigators compared two different combinations of antibiotics (Blumer 2005). One trial compared IV antibiotics administered in hospital compared to at home (Donati 1987) and two trials looked at an eradication regimen (Kenny 2009; TORPEDO 2018). One trial compared oral antibiotics to IV antibiotics (Park 2018). Six further trials were excluded as allocation was not by randomisation and because there were marked differences in baseline characteristics between the treatment and comparison groups (Hoogkamp 1983; Hyatt 1981; Krause 1979; Nelson 1985; NCT02421120; Roberts 1993). Two trials were excluded as they evaluated tools to assess treatment response (Hatziagorou 2013; Kuni 1992).
One trial included 30 participants. However, 17 of these received more than one course of treatment (Padoan 1987). In total, 40 courses of treatment took place (20 in each intervention group). The trial was cross‐over in design; but re‐randomisation took place between courses of treatment, resulting in some participants possibly receiving two or more courses of the same treatment, or a mixture of different treatments. Since the number of participants receiving each treatment was unclear, results could not be included in the analysis of this review and therefore the trial was excluded. Individual patient data are being requested from the authors of this trial so that data from this trial may be included in future updates (Padoan 1987).
Risk of bias in included studies
In earlier versions of the review, in order to assess the risk of bias in the trials, the review authors assessed the methodological quality of each trial using the following criteria: generation of allocation sequences; concealment of allocation schedule; inclusion in the analysis of all randomised participants; and double‐blinding (Schulz 1995).
For the current version of the review the review authors have used the Cochrane risk of bias tool judging the trials to have a low, unclear or high risk of bias (Higgins 2017).
Allocation
Generation of sequence
The authors assessed two trials as having a low risk of bias; one trial stated that participants were allocated to treatment groups using computer‐generated randomisation (Smith 1999) and one trial was stratified for age and disease severity during randomisation (Master 1997). Five trials had an unclear risk of bias as they stated that allocation was randomised, but did not specify the method of sequence generation (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Pedersen 1986). One trial used alternation but does not discuss how the first participant was randomised to their treatment group and the authors assessed this as inadequate, thus having a high risk of bias (Parry 1977).
Allocation concealment
The authors assessed four trials as adequately concealing the allocation schedule leading to a low risk of bias (Master 1997; McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999). Master stated that the code was only broken on completion of the study (Master 1997); another trial stated they used sequentially numbered envelopes (McCarty 1988); a further trial employed sealed envelopes prepared by pharmacy (McLaughlin 1983); and the fourth trial stated central randomisation (Smith 1999). The review authors assessed one trial as inadequately concealing the allocation schedule, since the investigators used alternate allocation, and judged this trial to have a high risk of bias (Parry 1977). In the remaining three trials the method of allocation concealment was unclear and so the reveiw authors judged these to have an unclear risk of bias (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Pedersen 1986).
Blinding
Five of the trials were described as double‐blinded as they used saline for the placebo injection (Huang 1982; Master 1997; McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999). The review authors judged these trials to have a low risk of bias. One trial did not explicitly state that blinding had taken place, but did state that both interventions were given with the same volume and in the same way, so the review authors assumed that there was some degree of blinding leading to a low risk of bias (Pedersen 1986). Two further trials stated that no blinding had taken place, thus the review authors deemed these to have a potential risk of bias (McCarty 1988; Parry 1977); and in the remaining trial it was not clear whether blinding had taken place and the review authors judged this to have an unclear risk of bias (Costantini 1982).
Incomplete outcome data
An intention‐to‐treat analysis was not stated in any of the included trials. In four, however, there appeared to be no withdrawals and so a low risk of attrition bias (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; McCarty 1988; Parry 1977). Three trials described numbers of withdrawals and reasons for these, so the review authors judged these to also have a low risk of bias (Master 1997; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999). Master published a flow chart showing numbers randomized and included or excluded (with reasons) at each stage in paper (Master 1997). Pedersen described reasons why three participants out of a cohort of 20 withdrew (Pedersen 1986). Smith stated that 35 out of 111 participants withdrew (21 from one group) and presented the reasons for withdrawals in a table (Smith 1999).
In the remaining trial, seven of the 41 participants did not complete the trial, six from the single therapy group and one from the combination group (reasons given); the review authors judged this trial to have an unclear risk of bias as although 17% of participants withdrew and nearly all were from one group, the reasons do not indicate an overall direct negative or positive relationship with the intervention (McLaughlin 1983).
Selective reporting
In three trials the outcomes stated in the methods section were reported in the results section of the trial reports, so the review authors judged these to have a low risk of reporting bias (Master 1997; McLaughlin 1983; Pedersen 1986). They judged four trials to have an unclear risk of bias (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; McCarty 1988; Smith 1999). Two trials were reported as abstracts only and since the protocols were not available and we were not able to compare the methods sections to the results sections in full reports (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982); and in two trials some clinical outcomes specified in the methods not directly reported and only summarised with brief narrative (McCarty 1988; Smith 1999). In the final trial, investigators state that "pulmonary function tests were performed when possible", but no further details or results are given, the review authors therefore judged this trial to have a high risk of bias (Parry 1977).
Other potential sources of bias
Two trials were reported as abstracts only and the review authors were unable to identify any other potential sources of bias and have judged these to have an unclear risk for this domain (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982). One trial undertook a power calculation to show an absolute difference in FEV1 % predicted of 2%, but the sample size was not achieved, therefore the review authors judged this to have an unclear risk of bias (Master 1997).
The remaining five trials had a low risk of bias, these were published as full papers and the review authors did not identify any other potential sources of bias (McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999).
Effects of interventions
Summary of findings 1. Summary of findings: single compared with combination intravenous anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy for people with cystic fibrosis ‐ short‐term effects.
Single compared with combination intravenous anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy for people with cystic fibrosis ‐ short‐term effects | ||||||
Patient or population: children and adults with cystic fibrosis Settings: inpatient or outpatient Intervention: combination IV antibiotic therapy Comparison: single IV antibiotic | ||||||
Outcomes | Illustrative comparative risks* (95% CI) | Relative effect (95% CI) | No of Participants (trials) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Comments | |
Assumed risk | Corresponding risk | |||||
Single IV antibiotic therapy | Combined IV antibiotic therapy | |||||
Change in FEV1 % predicted at end of antibiotic course: absolute post‐treatment values Follow‐up: 10 ‐ 14 days |
The mean FEV1 (% predicted) ranged across control groups from 46% to 50.9%. | The mean FEV1 (% predicted) in the intervention groups was 5.25% higher (9.14% lower to 19.64% higher). | MD 5.25 (95% CI ‐9.14 to 19.64) | 93 (2) | ⊕⊕⊝⊝
lowa,b |
3 further trials reported on this outcome, but it was not possible to include the data in our analyses. Master reported that the combination antibiotic group had a significantly higher FEV1 % predicted after 10 days of treatment (P < 0.05) (Master 1997). McCarty reported a "similar improvement" in FEV1 in both groups but no further detail (McCarty 1988). The elective trial reported higher median values for FEV1 % predicted in the combination group at baseline and Day 14, but at Day 90 the median was higher in the single antibiotic group (Pedersen 1986). |
Change in sputum P aeruginosa density at end of treatment (cfu/g) Follow‐up: 10 ‐ 14 days |
The mean (SD) sputum P aeruginosa density was 6.9 cfu/g (15.5) in the control group. | The mean sputum P aeruginosa density in the intervention groups was 1.60 cfu/g lower. (9.51 cfu/g lower to 6.31 cfu/g higher). | MD ‐1.60 cfu/g (95% CI ‐9.51 to 6.31) | 76 (1) | ⊕⊕⊕⊝
moderateb |
2 further trials looked at bacterial concentration, but used different measures and reported within‐group differences only. McLaughlin reported a significant decrease in bacterial concentration (cfu/mL) in the combination group and a non‐significant decrease in the single antibiotic group (McLaughlin 1983). McCarty reported 5/19 P aeruginosa isolates in the single therapy group decreased in titre by more than 10² cfu/mL compared to 12/19 P aeruginosa isolates in the combination group (McCarty 1988). |
Additional treatment required |
This outcome was not measured in the short term. | |||||
Time to next course of antibiotics |
This outcome was not reported in the short term. | |||||
Adverse events during treatment Follow‐up: 10 ‐ 14 days |
There were no differences between single or combination IV antibiotic therapy:
|
N/A | 131 (2) | ⊕⊕⊝⊝
lowb,c |
4 further trials provided narrative information on adverse events. Master reported tinnitus in 2 participants (1 in each group) which was thought to be related to tobramycin (Master 1997). Parry reported phlebitis in 6 participants, eosinophilia in 5 participants and urticaria in 1 participant, all in the single antibiotic group (Parry 1977). The two remaining trials reported no serious adverse events or incidences of auditory problems or nephrotoxicity in either group (Costantini 1982; Pedersen 1986). |
|
Quality of life |
This outcome was not measured in the short term. | |||||
*The basis for the assumed risk (e.g. the median control group risk across studies) is provided in footnotes. The corresponding risk (and its 95% CI) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI). cfu: colony forming units; CI: confidence interval; FEV1: forced expiratory volume in 1 second; IV: intravenous; MD: mean difference; RR: risk ratio; SD: standard deviation. | ||||||
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence High certainty: further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect. Moderate certainty: further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate. Low certainty: further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate. Very low certainty: we are very uncertain about the estimate. |
a. Downgraded once as there was an unclear risk of bias across some domains across the two trials. In one trial the randomisation methods weren't described adequately and both trials had a high dropout rate.
b. Downgraded once due to small sample size or low event rate, or both.
c. Downgraded once due to risk of bias within one of the included trials, particularly in the domains of sequence generation and blinding.
Summary of findings 2. Summary of findings: Single compared with combination intravenous anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy for people with cystic fibrosis ‐ long‐term effects.
Single compared with combination intravenous anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy for people with cystic fibrosis ‐ long‐term effects | ||||||
Patient or population: children and adults with cystic fibrosis Settings: inpatient or outpatient Intervention: combination IV antibiotic therapy Comparison: single IV antibiotic | ||||||
Outcomes | Illustrative comparative risks* (95% CI) | Relative effect (95% CI) | No of Participants (trials) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Comments | |
Assumed risk | Corresponding risk | |||||
Single IV antibiotic therapy | Combined IV antibiotic therapy | |||||
Change in FEV1 (% predicted) Follow‐up: 6 months |
This outcome was not reported. | 1 trial reported that there was no significant difference in pulmonary function tests, with mean follow‐up time of 20 months; but further commented that sample size restricted statistical power (Master 1997). | ||||
Change in sputum P aeruginosa density at end of treatment (cfu/g) |
This outcome was not reported in the long term. | |||||
Additional treatment required |
This outcome was not reported in the long term. | |||||
Time to next course of antibiotics |
This outcome was not reported in the long term. | |||||
Adverse events during treatment Follow‐up: 10 ‐ 14 days |
This outcome was not reported in the long term. | |||||
Quality of life Follow‐up: 6 months or more |
1 trial reported no statistically significant difference in NIH scores between treatment groups at the long‐term follow‐up (mean 20 months for both groups) (Master 1997). | |||||
*The basis for the assumed risk (e.g. the median control group risk across studies) is provided in footnotes. The corresponding risk (and its 95% CI) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI). cfu: colony forming units; CI: confidence interval; FEV1: forced expiratory volume in 1 second; IV: intravenous; NIH: National Institutes of Health. | ||||||
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence High certainty: further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect. Moderate certainty: further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate. Low certainty: further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate. Very low certainty: we are very uncertain about the estimate. |
Only those primary and secondary outcomes of this review, which were reported within the eight included trials, are listed below. Only one trial included results of follow‐up at over six months (Master 1997).
Single compared to combination therapy
Pooling of results was difficult because of missing data, differences in the methods of expression of the results and missing SDs. In this comparison the authors present eight trials with 356 participants (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Master 1997; McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999).
Short‐term results
Primary outcomes
1. Change in spirometric lung function
Although the outcome measure given in our protocol was improvement in spirometric lung function (now described as 'change' rather than improvement), no trial included these data.
Seven of the eight trials included lung function in some form as an outcome measure. However, there was great variety between the trials in the tests used, the time at measurement and the method of expression of the results. One trial, reported as an abstract only, fed pulmonary function into a clinical scoring system, but did not specify the actual outcome measures or report the pulmonary function results (Huang 1982). One trial states that "pulmonary function tests were performed when possible", but no further details or results are given (Parry 1977).
a. FEV1
Two trials measured mean FEV1 % predicted at the end of the treatment course (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999). These trials were randomised and gave baseline data, clearly stating that there was no significant difference between the single and combination treatment groups at baseline. We therefore analysed these outcomes and found no difference in FEV1 % predicted between single or combination therapy at 10 to 14 days (two trials, 93 participants; low‐certainty evidence) or at two to eight weeks (one trial, 41 participants) (Analysis 1.1).
One trial reported the mean absolute change in FEV1 % predicted from baseline to 10 days, but the data were based on 44 participants with 98 admissions so we are unable to analyse these in RevMan (Master 1997). However, investigators state that the mean (SD) change with combination antibiotics of 12.8% (13.5) compared to 10.6% (8.5) with a single antibiotic was statistically significant (P < 0.05). By the end of the study (a minimum of 12 months) the median (range) change in FEV1 % predicted was ‐2.2 (‐19.3 to 8.4) in the combination group compared to ‐5.8 (‐22.0 to 3.0) in the single antibiotic group (Master 1997)
The elective trial expressed the results for FEV1 % predicted in terms of a median and range at baseline, end of treatment and after 90 days (Pedersen 1986). Full details are presented in the additional tables (Table 3).
1. Lung function results (median (range)) from Pedersen 1986.
Time point | Outcome | Combination antibiotics | Single antibiotic |
Day 1 | FEV1 % predicted | 56 (35 to 74) | 53 (33 to 68) |
FVC % predicted | 57 (39 to 79) | 54 (38 to 67) | |
Day 14 | FEV1 % predicted | 69 (56 to 83) | 66 (52 to 81) |
FVC % predicted | 72 (60 to 85) | 64 (53 to 83) | |
Day 90 | FEV1 % predicted | 53 (27 to 70) | 55 (33 to 75) |
FVC % predicted | 67 (33 to 76) | 59 (45 to 80) |
FEV1: forced expiratory volume at 1 second FVC: forced vital capacity
One trial reported "similar improvement" in FEV1 but did not give any further details (McCarty 1988).
b. FVC
Two trials measured mean FVC % predicted at the end of the treatment course (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999). These trials were randomised and gave baseline data, clearly stating that there was no significant difference between the single and combination treatment groups at baseline. We therefore analysed these outcomes and found no difference in FVC % predicted between the two treatment groups at at 10 to 14 days (two trials, 93 participants) or at two to eight weeks (one trial, 41 participants) (Analysis 1.2).
The Master trial reported the mean absolute change in FVC % predicted from baseline to 10 days, but the data were based on 44 participants with 98 admissions so we are unable to analyse these in RevMan (Master 1997). However, investigators state that FVC % predicted the mean (SD) change from baseline was significantly greater (P < 0.05) in the combination group, 12.1% (12.0), compared to 9.9% (9.1) in the single antibiotic group (Master 1997).
The elective trial expressed the results for FVC % predicted in terms of a median and range at baseline, end of treatment and after 90 days (Pedersen 1986). Full details are presented in the additional tables (Table 3).
McCarty also reported "similar improvement" in FVC, but did not give any further details (McCarty 1988).
c. Other measures of lung function
Two trials reported a range of other measures of lung function, but found no differences between single or combination antibiotic treatments: mean RV % predicted (Analysis 1.3); mean TLC % predicted (Analysis 1.4); mean RV/TLC % predicted (Analysis 1.5); mean PFR % predicted (Analysis 1.6); and mean MMEF % predicted (Analysis 1.7).
2. Sputum bacteriology
a. Eradication of P aeruginosa
Three trials reported on eradication of P aeruginosa (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982, Pedersen 1986). At up to 14 days, Huang found no difference between the single or combination antibiotic groups, but at two to eight weeks Costantini reported more cases of eradication in the single antibiotic group than the combination group, OR 10.16 (95% CI 1.44 to 71.65) (Analysis 1.8). The elective trial stated that neither treatment succeeded in eradication P aeruginosa from participants (Pedersen 1986).
b. Bacterial concentration
One trial reported the change in sputum P aeruginosa density in colony forming units per gram (cfu/g) (Smith 1999). This trial showed a significant decrease in P aeruginosa density in both treatment groups at the end of treatment, with a greater decrease in the combination group. The difference between groups in the mean change in density was MD ‐1.60 (95% confidence interval (CI) ‐9.51 to 6.31) (Analysis 1.9), i.e. the mean decrease in P aeruginosa density was 1.6 cfu/g greater in the combination treatment group than for the single treatment group (moderate‐certainty evidence). However, on follow‐up, the density of P aeruginosa in the sputum was similar in both groups.
One trial reported a change in sputum bacterial concentration in mean log cfu/mL, with a significant reduction in concentration of bacteria between days 1 and 10 in both combination treatment groups (P ≤ 0.01) and a non‐significant reduction in the single treatment group (P value not given) (McLaughlin 1983). At three‐month follow‐up, the investigators state that bacterial concentration returned to a similar level as pre‐treatment. Although this data is demonstrated in a figure, the numerical values are not included in the text (McLaughlin 1983).
One trial reported 19 P aeruginosa isolates from each group; however, since only 17 participants were randomised in the trial the data are not independent and can not be analysed in RevMan (McCarty 1988). Investigators reported that only 5 out of 19 isolates in the single antibiotic (piperacillin) group decreased in titer by greater than 10² cfu/mL compared to 12 out of 19 isolates in the combination (piperacillin plus tobramycin) group (McCarty 1988).
One trial was not able to compare sputum density on days 1 and 10 as most participants were unable to expectorate on day 10 (Master 1997).
c. Antibiotic sensitivity
Six of the eight trials examined sputum for drug sensitivity at the beginning of the trial; five of these defined sensitivity in terms of minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC). One trial found that the disc diffusion method did not identify resistant strains (Smith 1999). The trials varied in their definitions of resistance, e.g. resistance to tobramycin was defined as MIC greater than 8 μg/ml in one trial (McLaughlin 1983) and as MIC greater than 32 μg/ml in another (Master 1997). No trial used antibiotic sensitivity in their entry criteria. In one trial, the bacteria were clearly sensitive to the antibiotics used (Pedersen 1986). This trial gave mean MIC values at baseline and the end of the treatment course and found no significant change. Parry reported MIC values for all the isolates for ticarcillin and carbenicillin and found that the median MIC value for ticarcillin at two to six months post‐treatment was same as the pre‐treatment value (3.1 μg/mL), but investigators did not define antibiotic resistance (Parry 1977). One further trial stated that there was no significant difference between the single and combination groups at the beginning of the treatment period, and that emergence of resistance was not seen with any isolate (McCarty 1988). The remaining trial states that sputum cultures were tested for antibiotic sensitivity but gives no further information (Costantini 1982).
In the two trials included in the analysis, the number of participants developing resistant strains of P aeruginosa at baseline, end of treatment and follow‐up at between two and eight weeks was reported (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999). For completeness, we have shown each of these analyses on the forest plot, as well as the difference between baseline and follow‐up in two of the trials. The second trial could not be represented in the latter analysis, as the total numbers of participants changed from baseline to follow‐up (Smith 1999). McLaughlin classified bacteria as resistant to tobramycin if the MIC was greater than 8 μg/ml and to azlocillin if the MIC was greater than 125 μg/ml (McLaughlin 1983). Smith defined resistance to tobramycin if the MIC was greater than 8 μg/ml and for azlocillin, if the MIC was greater than 100 μg/ml (Smith 1999).
The result of the analysis showed that the difference between the single and combination therapy groups was not significant at baseline or at the end of the treatment course (Analysis 1.10). At two to eight weeks follow‐up, both trials individually showed an increase in the number of participants with resistant strains of P aeruginosa with single therapy, but the aggregated results showed that the difference was not significant. However, the aggregation of the studies at follow‐up included a relatively small number of participants, with a total of 40 participants in each group. Calculation of the difference between the numbers of participants with resistant strains from baseline to two to eight weeks post‐treatment also favoured combination treatment, although the difference was not significant.
3. Adverse events
Two trials reported analysable data for adverse events (McCarty 1988; Smith 1999). The most commonly reported were: local erythema at the injection site; generalised rash; fever; renal impairment and proteinuria; auditory impairment; and hypersensitivity reaction, with no differences found between treatment groups (Analysis 1.11).
The only adverse event in the Master trial was tinnitus, which was experienced by one participant in each group and was thought to be related to inadvertent rapid administration of tobramycin (Master 1997). The three‐arm Parry trial reported adverse events which were probably drug‐related for each of the single antibiotic arms (Parry 1977). In the ticarcillin arm (n = 28) phlebitis was reported by six participants, eosinophilia by five participants and urticaria by one participant; in the gentamicin arm cylinduria was reported by one participant (Parry 1977). Costantini reported there were no incidences of either auditory or nephrotoxicity (Costantini 1982).
The elective trial reported that no serious adverse events were recorded during either treatment arm (Pedersen 1986).
Secondary outcomes
2. Nutritional status
a. Change in weight
Two trials report that weight gain was similar between the two treatment groups (McCarty 1988; Parry 1977).
4. Hospitalisation
Two trials measured the number of participants readmitted to hospital within given time periods of one month (Huang 1982) and 80 days (Smith 1999). Huang found no significant difference between the two groups (Huang 1982). The results from the Smith trial favoured combination therapy, Peto OR 0.30 (95% CI 0.12 to 0.73) (Smith 1999) (Analysis 1.12).
A further trial reported on the mean number of weeks that participants remained out of hospital within the three month follow‐up period (McLaughlin 1983). There was no difference found between the single or combination groups (Analysis 1.13).
5. Time to next course of antibiotics
Only one trial reported the effect on the time to next course of antibiotics (McLaughlin 1983). There was no significant difference between the two groups (Analysis 1.13). A futher trial reported that time interval to next course of antibiotics did not differ significantly between treatment groups but no numerical data was provided (Parry 1977).
6. Clinical status
a. Chest x‐ray scores
One trial reports that chest x‐rays (assessed with Chrispin‐Norman scores) only showed significant improvement in the antibiotic combination group but no numerical data was provided (Costantini 1982). One trial reported no difference between treatment groups of "percentage improvement in chest radiograph" without information regarding how this percentage was calculated (Parry 1977). One trial devised their own scoring system consisting of a combination of clinical, radiological and pulmonary function factors and reported no difference between group scores either before or after treatment (Huang 1982).
b. Other symptom scores
One trial measured mean Schwachman score (McLaughlin 1983); groups did not significantly differ at baseline and analysis of the data found no difference between groups at the end of treatment (Analysis 1.14). A second trial reporting Schwachman score described similar improvements in both groups (McCarty 1988). A further three‐arm trial presented baseline Schwachmann scores in a table, but the paper does not report post‐treatment values (Parry 1977).
One trial reported that the exacerbation score decreased significantly (P < 0.001) in each group and remained lower than the admission values at the follow‐up assessment (Smith 1999). One trial devised their own scoring system consisting of a combination of clinical, radiological and pulmonary function factors and reported no difference between group scores either before or after treatment (Huang 1982). One trial reported that "clinical improvement was obtained in the 80% ‐ 90% of patients regardless of the therapeutic regimen" according to a clinical score that included serological and clinical factors (Costantini 1982).
7. Changes in inflammatory markers
One trial reported blood or sputum markers of inflammation (Smith 1999). This trial reported mean white blood cell (WBC) count at the end of the antibiotic course and involved treatment groups with similar baseline characteristics. There was no significant difference between the groups (Analysis 1.15). One trial reported no difference in change of white blood cell count or sedimentation rate between treatment groups (Parry 1977). One trial reported a statistically significant decrease in white blood cell count in both treatment groups, with no difference between groups (Pedersen 1986).
Long‐term results
Primary outcomes
1. Change in lung function
One trial reported that there was no significant difference in pulmonary function tests, with mean follow‐up time of 20 months; but further commented that sample size restricted statistical power (Master 1997).
Secondary outcomes
1. QoL
One trial reported no statistically significant difference in NIH scores between treatment groups (Master 1997).
Discussion
Choice of anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic and the use of single or combined therapy are controversial areas in the treatment of respiratory infection in CF. Current practice is variable. Advantages of combination therapy include a wider range of modes of action, possible synergy and reduction of resistant organisms; whereas advantages of monotherapy include lower cost and a reduction of drug‐related toxicity. From the perspective of people with CF, using a beta‐lactam alone offers such advantages as ease of administration and no requirement for blood sampling to measure aminoglycoside levels. Current evidence does not provide a clear answer and, therefore, the use of IV antibiotic therapy in CF requires further evaluation.
Summary of main results
This review has found eight trials that examined the effect of single compared to combination IV anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy, seven of these were for acute exacerbations in CF (Costantini 1982; Huang 1982; Master 1997; McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977; Smith 1999) and one examined an elective quarterly regimen (Pedersen 1986). There was considerable heterogeneity amongst these trials, which led to difficulties in performing the review and interpreting the results. We were unable to perform adequate meta‐analysis for most outcome measures.
Short‐term results
While most included trials reported on lung function, there was great variety in the tests used, the time points reported and how the results were reported. The overall results from our limited analysis (two trials, 93 participants; low‐certainty evidence) showed that there was no difference between monotherapy and combination therapy (either symptomatic or elective regimen) in terms of lung function at the end of treatment for an exacerbation (McLaughlin 1983; Smith 1999). Other trials also reported similar narrative results for lung function for single and combination treatment regimens; although one symptomatic trial presented data for participants with multiple admissions and reported a greater increase in both FEV1 % predicted and FVC % predicted with combination antibiotics compared to a single antibiotic (Master 1997). In the elective trial, the median (range) values for lung function (FEV1 and FVC % predicted) demonstrated similar increases from baseline to 14 days which then returned to baseline levels at 90 days (Pedersen 1986).
At up to 14 days, one study (n = 25) found no difference in P aeruginosa eradication between the single or combination antibiotic groups (Huang 1982), but at two to eight weeks a further trial (n = 18) reported more cases of eradication in the single antibiotic group than the combination group (Costantini 1982). The elective trial stated that neither treatment succeeded in eradication P aeruginosa from participants (Pedersen 1986). There were no further differences in terms of bacteriological outcomes.
Five symptomatic trials and the elective trial reported adverse effects of treatment (data were available from three symptomatic trials (Master 1997; McCarty 1988; Smith 1999)), but no differences between single or combination antibiotics were identified. Two trials reported similar weight gain in both treatment groups (McCarty 1988; Parry 1977). Two trials reported on hospitalisations (Huang 1982; Smith 1999), but only one found a difference between groups (favouring combination therapy) (Smith 1999); two trials reporting the time to the next course of antibiotics found no difference between groups (McLaughlin 1983; Parry 1977). No trial reporting symptom scores found any difference between single or combination antibiotics, e.g. Schwachman scores (McCarty 1988; McLaughlin 1983), an exacerbation score (Smith 1999) and a trial‐specific clinical score (Huang 1982). We found no effect on inflammatory markers or on resistant strains of P aeruginosa.
Long‐term results
Only one trial (n = 51) reported limited long‐term results (at 20 months) (Master 1997). Investigators found no difference between symptomatic single or combination antibiotic treatment in pulmonary function tests or QoL (NIH scores); but further commented that sample size restricted statistical power (Master 1997). The trial did not report any other outcomes of this review.
Overall completeness and applicability of evidence
The trials were very heterogeneous in terms of design, drugs used, duration of treatment and follow‐up and outcome measures. Inconsistencies in expression of results and statistical reporting made meta‐analysis impossible in most cases and individual patient data would need to be collected from authors to clarify these issues. It was disappointing that only four trials included data that were possible to analyse. Most of the outcome measures analysed included data from only one or two trials. Due to the small number of trials, it was not possible to examine for effects of trial quality, type of antibiotic or treatment regimen using sensitivity and subgroup analyses.
In our protocol we stated that we would like to compare the differences between adults and children. This was not possible, as no trial looked at children alone. No trial looked specifically at QoL scores. While there were some short‐term data on resistant strains of P aeruginosa and side effects, there were no data for these outcomes in the long term. This may be relevant particularly to children, in whom there is emerging evidence of ototoxicity due to chronic use of aminoglycosides (Katbamna 1998; Mulherin 1991). Only six of the eight trials stated that they had looked for adverse effects (Costantini 1982; Master 1997; McCarty 1988; Parry 1977; Pedersen 1986; Smith 1999); therefore there may have been side effects that have not been identified. The longest follow‐up in all but one trial in this systematic review was six months, but the majority of trials did not have any follow‐up after the acute course of antibiotics. Potential problems with development of drug‐resistant bacteria, which may shorten long‐term survival, may not be detected in trials of such short duration covered by this review.
Quality of the evidence
These results should be interpreted with caution. All but two of the included trials were published between 1977 and 1988; these were single‐centre trials with flaws in the randomisation process. Furthermore, the sample sizes were too small to have the power to detect a difference between the two groups. Three of the eight trials were not published as full papers. Overall, the methodological quality was poor: only one trial was considered to have adequate randomisation allocation and concealment (Smith 1999); only four were double‐blinded; and none stated any intention‐to‐treat analysis. Using the GRADE framework, we downgraded the certainty of evidence for short‐term effects due to risk of bias issues and small sample sizes (Table 1). There was insufficient information and data for us to carry out GRADE assessments for the long‐term trials (Table 2).
The review raises some interesting methodological issues, including the difficulties of pooling results from a number of small trials that are of poor quality.
Potential biases in the review process
Comprehensive searches were undertaken and the review authors are confident that all eligible trials have been identified. For each iteration of the review, two authors have independently assessed studies and the data presented in this review, in order to minimise any potential biases or errors.
Agreements and disagreements with other studies or reviews
A review of current evidence was performed by a committee established by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, who agree that there is insufficient evidence to support use of either single or combination therapy; however, they recognise that standard practice is to treat with combination therapy and do not feel there is sufficient evidence to recommend changing this strategy (Flume 2008).
This version of the review is an update of previous review versions (Elphick 2002; Elphick 2005; Elphick 2014).
Authors' conclusions
Implications for practice.
The results of this review, regarding the benefits and risks of single versus combination anti‐pseudomonal antibiotic therapy in terms of lung function and clinical outcome in people with cystic fibrosis (CF), are inconclusive. In particular, side effects of treatment have not been investigated to a sufficient level, and therefore it is not possible to conclude from this review that either treatment choice is preferable or safer compared to the other. All the trials included in the review looked at different antibiotics, both as a single anti‐pseudomonal agent and in combination therapy and therefore the drug(s) of choice remains uncertain.
Implications for research.
This systematic review raises important questions regarding the use of antibiotic combinations for acute exacerbations in CF, which need to be answered by further randomised controlled trials. These trials need to be designed to overcome the methodological issues highlighted by this review, such as randomisation allocation, blinding, adequate power and long‐term follow‐up. There is a particular need to compare the effects of single anti‐pseudomonal therapy versus a combination of anti‐pseudomonal antibiotics in terms of long‐term toxicity and the development of drug‐resistant organisms. An observational cohort study, co‐ordinated through national databases, of centres whose practice is either monotherapy or combination therapy may give useful information on a large number of participants for these outcomes. Results need to be standardised to a consistent method of reporting, for example, mean and SD change in FEV1 and FVC expressed as % predicted in order to validate the pooling of results from multiple trials.
In view of the emergence of long‐term side effects such as ototoxicity with cumulative use of aminoglycoside antibiotics, it would be important to address this issue within a trial; this could be particularly pertinent to children.
What's new
Date | Event | Description |
---|---|---|
30 June 2021 | Review declared as stable | Due to a lack of research in this area, this review will no longer be updated. |
History
Protocol first published: Issue 2, 2000 Review first published: Issue 1, 2001
Date | Event | Description |
---|---|---|
12 April 2021 | New citation required but conclusions have not changed | Two new authors have updated this review after the previous author team stepped down. The review's conclusions remain the same. |
12 April 2021 | New search has been performed | A search of the Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Review Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified 24 references that were potentially eligible for inclusion in the review and searches of online trials registries identified a further three references to three studies. Three references were single additional references to already excluded studies (Gold 1985; Hubert 2009; Prayle 2016). 13 new studies (29 references) were excluded (Al‐Aloul 2004; Al‐Aloul 2019; CFMATTERS 2017; Moskowitz 2011; NCT01044719; NCT01667094; NCT01694069; NCT02421120; NCT02918409; NCT03066453; Park 2018; STOP 2 2018; TORPEDO 2018). We have added two new summary of findings tables to this updated review. |
14 October 2016 | New citation required but conclusions have not changed | Dr Alison Scott has replaced Nikki Jahnke on the review team. The review title has been amended to reflect that the therapies included focus on anti‐pseudomonal antibiotics. No new data were added to the review at this update, therefore our conclusions remain the same. |
14 October 2016 | New search has been performed | A search of the Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Review Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified three new references that were potentially eligible for inclusion in the review. One reference was an additional reference to an already excluded trial (Blumer 2005); the remaining two references to two trials were also excluded (Prayle 2016; Turner 2013). |
29 April 2014 | New citation required but conclusions have not changed | The previous co‐author, Dr Anton Tan, has stepped down and a new co‐author, Nikki Jahnke, has joined the review team. No new references have been added to this review, hence the conclusions remain the same. |
29 April 2014 | New search has been performed | A search of the Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified seven references to six potentially eligible studies all of which were excluded from the review (Beringer 2012; Blumer 2005; Hatziagorou 2013; Keel 2011; McCabe 2013; Semykin 2010). |
17 October 2012 | Amended | Contact details updated. |
3 November 2011 | New search has been performed | A search of the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified 15 new references potentially eligible for inclusion in this review. However, none of the references were suitable for inclusion in the review. |
15 September 2009 | New search has been performed | A search of the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Register identified no new references which were potentially eligible for inclusion in this review. |
11 November 2008 | New search has been performed | A search of the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified no new references eligible for inclusion in this review. |
11 November 2008 | Amended | Converted to new review format. |
20 February 2008 | New search has been performed | A search of the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified no new references eligible for inclusion in this review. |
20 February 2008 | Amended | The 'Plain Language Summary' has been updated in line with latest guidance from The Cochrane Collaboration. |
21 February 2007 | New search has been performed | A search of the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified no new references eligible for inclusion in this review. |
15 February 2006 | New search has been performed | A search of the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified no new references. |
9 February 2005 | New citation required and conclusions have changed | Substantive amendment |
9 February 2005 | New search has been performed | A search of the Group's Cystic Fibrosis Trials Register identified no new references. One previously included trial has now been excluded from the review (Padoan 1987). In this trial a total of 40 courses of treatment took place (20 in each intervention group). The trial was cross‐over in design, however, re‐randomisation took place between courses of treatment, resulting in some participants possibly receiving two or more courses of the same treatment, or a mixture of different treatments. Since the number of participants receiving each treatment was unclear, results could not be included in the analysis of this review and therefore the trial was excluded. |
13 November 2002 | New search has been performed | Excluded Studies: One additional study has been added ‐ Krause 1979. An additional reference to the Nelson 1985 study has also been included. |
Notes
Description of the pharmacological properties of the antibiotics used in the studies included in the review (Kucers 1997).
1. Beta‐Lactams
a. Carbenicillin
Carbenicillin is a semisynthetic penicillin derived from the penicillin nucleus 6 APA and can only be administered parenterally. Its most important feature is its activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa due to its ability to penetrate the outer cell membrane of the bacteria and is less susceptible than other beta‐lactam antibiotics to at least one beta‐lactamase produced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. It is also active against other gram positive and negative aerobic organisms including Staphylococcus aureus and Haemophilus influenzae. Principal side effects include hypersensitivity, drug fever and rarely convulsions and effects on platelet function.
b. Ticarcillin
Ticarcillin is very similar to carbenicillin but is at least twice as active against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. It has now replaced carbenicillin for clinical use. As ticarcillin is used in a lower dosage than carbenicillin, it causes fewer side effects, but can be associated with eosinophilia and urticaria.
c. Piperacillin
Piperacillin and azlocillin are semisynthetic penicillins, referred to as 'newer anti‐pseudomonal penicillins' and are considerably more active in vitro than carbenicillin and ticarcillin against Pseudomonas aeruginosa due to their ability to pass through the layers of the cell envelope to reach the enzyme penicillin‐binding protein PBP3, which is responsible for septum formation during bacterial growth and cell division. Piperacillin is not however clinically superior and development of resistant strains have been observed. Piperacillin also has activity against Burkholderia cepacia, Haemophilus influenzae, Staphylococcus aureus and other gram negative organisms. Main side effects are similar to those of carbenicillin.
d. Azlocillin
Azlocillin is a ureido‐penicillin and is similar to piperacillin in its activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa and acts synergistically with aminoglycosides. Azlocillin‐resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains are uncommon. It has some activity against Haemophilus influenzae.
e. Ceftazidime
Ceftazidime is a third generation cephalosporin, resistant to the usual beta‐lactamases of most gram negative bacteria and its activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa is one of its most important properties. Ceftazidime‐resistant strains have been described. Ceftazidime can only be administered parenterally and acts in a similar way to penicillin G on the bacterial cell wall and shows an affinity for PBP3. Ceftazidime has low toxicity with a low incidence of hypersensitivity, eosinophilia and reversible elevations in liver enzymes.
2. Aminoglycosides
a. Gentamicin
Gentamicin is an aminoglycoside antibiotic which has particular activity against gram‐negative organisms. Its usefulness has decreased since the mid‐1970s because of the emergence of bacterial resistance. Gentamicin inhibits bacterial growth by inhibiting protein synthesis in a manner similar to streptomycin. It probably also interacts with the cell envelope of some gram‐negative bacilli such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, resulting in lysis of the cell. Gentamicin has also been shown to inhibit the activity of the extracellular proteases secreted by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, enzymes which contribute to pathogenicity. The major side effects seen with gentamicin are ototoxicity in the form of both cochlear and vestibular toxicity with high prolonged serum levels of the drug and nephrotoxicity due to damage to the proximal tubules, characterised by excretion of casts, oliguria, proteinuria and elevated urea and creatinine. Other side effects include neuromuscular blockade, hypersensitivity reactions and haematological effects.
b. Tobramycin
Tobramycin is an aminoglycoside antibiotic with a similar mode of action to gentamicin but its advantages include greater intrinsic activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, activity against some gentamicin‐resistant strains and lesser nephrotoxicity and therefore is often used in preference to gentamicin. The efficacy and safety of tobramycin given as a once‐daily infusion in cystic fibrosis are currently under evaluation.
c. Sisomycin
Sisomycin is another aminoglycoside with similar antimicrobial spectrum to gentamicin. Sisomycin is more active than gentamicin, but less active than tobramycin against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. It has had limited clinical trials and has been available commercially in Europe but not in the UK, USA or Australia. The toxicity is about the same as that of gentamicin.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Dr A. Tan, Dr H. Elphick and Dr A. Scott for their previous contributions to this review.
This project was supported by the National Institute for Health Research, via Cochrane Infrastructure funding to the Cochrane Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Group. The views and opinions expressed therein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Systematic Reviews Programme, NIHR, NHS or the Department of Health.
Appendices
Appendix 1. Electronic search strategies
Database | Search strategy | Date searched |
US National Institutes of Health Ongoing Trials Register Clinicaltrials.gov (www.clinicaltrials.gov) |
[Advanced Search] CONDITION/ DISEASE: Cystic Fibrosis OTHER TERMS: (Antibiotic OR antibacterial) AND intravenous AND (Pseudomonas aeruginosa OR P. aeruginosa) STUDY TYPE: Interventional Studies |
16 November 2020 |
World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (WHO ICTRP) (apps.who.int/trialsearch) |
[Advanced Search Form]
TITLE: antibiotics OR antibacterial CONDITION: cystic fibrosis INTERVENTION: intravenous OR IV RECRUITMENT STATUS: All |
database unavailable due to Covid‐19 pandemic |
Data and analyses
Comparison 1. Single versus combination antibiotics.
Outcome or subgroup title | No. of studies | No. of participants | Statistical method | Effect size |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.1 FEV1 % predicted (mean absolute values at end of course) | 2 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.1.1 at 10 to 14 days | 2 | 93 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | 5.25 [‐9.14, 19.64] |
1.1.2 at 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 41 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.50 [‐57.36, 58.36] |
1.2 Mean FVC at end of course (% pred) | 2 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.2.1 at 10 to 14 days | 2 | 93 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | 1.84 [‐11.44, 15.12] |
1.2.2 at 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 41 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | 6.90 [‐50.50, 64.30] |
1.3 Mean RV at end of course (% pred) | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.3.1 at 10 to 14 days | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.4 Mean TLC at end of course (% pred) | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.4.1 at 10 to 14 days | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.5 Mean RV/TLC at end of course (% pred) | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.5.1 at 10 to 14 days | 1 | 64 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | ‐1.40 [‐40.68, 37.88] |
1.5.2 At 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 40 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | ‐5.20 [‐54.27, 43.87] |
1.6 Mean PFR at end of course (% pred) | 2 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.6.1 at 10 to 14 days | 2 | 91 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | 3.21 [‐11.49, 17.91] |
1.6.2 At 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 40 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | 2.30 [‐60.90, 65.50] |
1.7 Mean MMEF at end of course (% pred) | 2 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.7.1 at 10 to 14 days | 2 | 91 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | 7.17 [‐8.22, 22.55] |
1.7.2 At 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 40 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | ‐1.90 [‐73.27, 69.47] |
1.8 Number of Pseudomonas isolates eradicated at end of course | 2 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.8.1 at 10 to 14 days | 1 | 16 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 6.34 [0.51, 78.02] |
1.8.2 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 18 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 10.16 [1.44, 71.65] |
1.9 Mean change Pseudomonas density in cfu/g at end of course | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.9.1 at 10 to 14 days | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.10 Number resistant strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 2 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.10.1 at baseline | 2 | 140 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.83 [0.38, 1.82] |
1.10.2 at 10 to 14 days | 2 | 99 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 2.44 [0.94, 6.32] |
1.10.3 at 2 to 8 weeks | 2 | 76 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.44 [0.17, 1.14] |
1.10.4 Difference from baseline at 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 29 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.27 [0.06, 1.18] |
1.11 Number adverse events | 2 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.11.1 local erythema / irritation | 2 | 131 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.46 [0.09, 2.36] |
1.11.2 generalised rash | 1 | 20 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 6.16 [0.12, 316.67] |
1.11.3 fever | 1 | 20 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.81 [0.05, 14.14] |
1.11.4 renal impairment (increased creatinine by 50%) | 1 | 80 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 1.54 [0.15, 15.56] |
1.11.5 auditory impairment | 1 | 76 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 5.86 [0.11, 305.44] |
1.11.6 proteinuria | 1 | 63 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 3.62 [0.68, 19.30] |
1.12 Number readmitted to hospital | 2 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | Subtotals only | |
1.12.1 at 2 to 8 weeks | 1 | 16 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.14 [0.01, 1.30] |
1.12.2 in 80 days | 1 | 76 | Peto Odds Ratio (Peto, Fixed, 95% CI) | 0.30 [0.12, 0.73] |
1.13 Mean time to next course of antibiotics (weeks) | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.14 Mean Schwachman score at end of course | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.15 Mean WBC count at end of course | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected | |
1.15.1 at 10 to 14 days | 1 | Mean Difference (IV, Fixed, 95% CI) | Totals not selected |
Characteristics of studies
Characteristics of included studies [ordered by study ID]
Costantini 1982.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | RCT. Duration: variable duration of course (mean (SD) 15 (3.4) days). Symptomatic regimen. |
|
Participants | 28 pulmonary exacerbations in 19 participants with CF. Age not given but stated that groups similar in age and disease severity. PsA colonised. |
|
Interventions | Single antibiotic group 1: carbenicillin 675 mg/kg/day. Single antibiotic group 2: sisomycin 10.5 mg/kg/day. Combination antibiotic group: carbenicillin 590 mg/kg/day plus sisomycin 10 mg/kg/day. |
|
Outcomes | CXR and symptom scores, bacteriology, development of resistant strains. | |
Notes | Abstract: no data. No withdrawals. |
|
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Randomly assigned, but no further details given. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Not directly discussed, but referred to as a controlled clinical trial. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | Not discussed. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | Not discussed, but appears to be no withdrawals. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Not clear, only published as an abstract and protocol not available. |
Other bias | Unclear risk | None identified, but limited information as only published as an abstract. |
Huang 1982.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | Double‐blind RCT. Parallel design, 3‐arm* Duration: 10‐day course. Symptomatic regimen. |
|
Participants | 25 participants randomised. Age not stated. Mixed PsA and non‐PsA. |
|
Interventions | Single antibiotic group (n = 6): ticarcillin 300 mg/kg/day. Combined antibiotic group 1 (n = 10): ticarcillin 300 mg/kg/day plus tobramycin 6 mg/kg/day. Combined antibiotic group 2 (n = 9): carbenicillin 500 mg/kg/day plus tobramycin 6 mg/kg/day. |
|
Outcomes | Lung function, number readmitted within one month, CXR and symptom scores, bacteriology. | |
Notes | *originally tobramycin plus ticarcillin vs tobramycin vs carbenicillin vs placebo, but due to consent issues using placebo, ticarcillin alone substituted for placebo without breaking the code. Abstract: lung function, CXR and symptom score data not given. No withdrawals. |
|
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Mentions randomisation code, but no details given of how it was generated. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Mentions randomisation code, but no details of how this may have been concealed. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Stated as double‐blind, but no further details given. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | Not discussed, but appears to be no drop outs or withdrawals. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Not clear, only published as an abstract and protocol not available. |
Other bias | Unclear risk | None identified, but limited information as only published as an abstract. |
Master 1997.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | Double‐blind RCT. Parallel trial. Duration: 10‐day course. Symptomatic regimen. |
|
Participants | 51 participants randomised (combination n = 22, single n = 29). Combination (tobramycin and ceftazidime) group: 21 participants with 51 admissions assessed; mean (SD) age 16 (7) years. Single (tobramycin) group: 23 participants with 47 admissions assessed; mean (SD) age 14 (5) years. 12 participants in the combination (tobramycin and ceftazidime) group and 9 participants in the single (tobramycin) group were eligible for long‐term assessment (at lease 2 admissions in 12 months). Participants in both groups experienced an average of 3.1 and 3.0 admissions, respectively, for IV antibiotic treatment during the study period. |
|
Interventions | Single antibiotic group: tobramycin once daily (9 mg/kg/dose). Combination antibiotic group: tobramycin once daily (3 mg/kg/dose) plus ceftazidime 50 mg/kg/dose 8‐hourly. Participants given 6 syringes/day, in the combination group these were 3 each of tobramycin and ceftazidime, in the single group these were a single syringe of tobramycin and 5 syringes of sodium chloride (placebo). |
|
Outcomes | Lung function, adverse events. | |
Notes | Full paper. Exclusion criteria stated. The trial was halted for a period of 3 months when one of the trial participants committed suicide by utilizing a trial syringe to administer a lethal substance. The trial was recommenced after the coroner's finding that this was an unrelated death. During this time of suspension, there were 14 admissions of participants previously enrolled. Data from these admissions were not included. |
|
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Randomization was stratified for age and disease severity. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | The treatment code was broken only at the completion of the trial. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Medical staff, nursing staff and participants were blinded to the treatment. Participants given 6 syringes/day, in the combination group these were 3 each of tobramycin and ceftazidime, in the single group these were a single syringe of tobramycin and 5 syringes of sodium chloride (placebo). |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Flow chart showing numbers randomized and included/excluded (with reasons) at each stage in paper. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Low risk | Outcomes stated in the methods section were reported in the results section. |
Other bias | Unclear risk | Power calculation undertaken to show an absolute difference in FEV1 % predicted of 2%, but sample size not achieved. |
McCarty 1988.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | RCT. Parallel design (but 3 participants treated on more than one occasion ‐ see below). Duration: minimum of 10 days. Symptomatic regimen. |
|
Participants | 17 participants experiencing a pulmonary exacerbation. 3 participants treated on more than one occasion (2 initially in piperacillin group and several months later randomised to combination group; 1 participant enrolled 2x in piperacillin group). 20 data sets. Age, range: 2 to 12 years. Mixed PsA and non‐PsA. |
|
Interventions | Single antibiotic group (n = 8): piperacillin 600 mg/kg/day. Combination antibiotic group (n = 9): piperacillin plus tobramycin 8 to 10 mg/kg/day. All participants also received intense chest physiotherapy and nutritional support. |
|
Outcomes | Lung function, weight, symptom scores (Schwachman scale), adverse events, bacteriology. | |
Notes | No data for lung function, weight or symptom scores. No withdrawals. |
|
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Treatment randomly assigned, no further details. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Used sequentially numbered envelopes. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | High risk | No details on blinding specified, not double‐blind. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Clear explanation of participants in groups, no drop outs occurred. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Some clinical outcomes specified in the methods not directly reported and only summarised with a single narrative sentence. |
Other bias | Low risk | None identified. |
McLaughlin 1983.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | Double‐blind RCT. Duration: 10 days with follow‐up after approximately 4 weeks. Symptomatic regimen. No ITT analysis. |
|
Participants | 60 participants originally enrolled and 51 completed. Age, mean (SD): 21 (5) years. PsA in 98%. Schwachman score, mean (SD), range: 60 (14), 36 ‐ 83. Age and Schwachman score similar across groups. |
|
Interventions | Single antibiotic group (n = 16): azlocillin 300 mg/kg/day in 6 divided doses plus placebo (0.85% NaCl) in 3 divided doses. Combination antibiotic group 1 (n = 17): ticarcillin 300 mg/kg/day in 6 divided doses plus plus tobramycin 6 mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses. Combination antibiotic group 2 (n = 18): azlocillin 300 mg/kg/day in 6 divided doses plus tobramycin 6 mg/kg per day in 3 divided doses. All participants also received chest physiotherapy. |
|
Outcomes | Lung function, symptom scores, development of resistant strains, time to next course. | |
Notes | Only data from the single antibiotic group and the azlocillin plus tobramycin group are presented in the review. Participants were white, of various socioeconomic backgrounds and lived in New England. Exclusion criteria stated. |
|
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Participants randomly selected, but no further details given. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Hospital pharmacist used consecutively numbered sealed envelopes. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Neither participants or clinicians knew which regimen they were receiving. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | 9 participants withdrew: 3 participants withdrawn for drug‐related complications (1 participant from single antibiotic group for haemoptysis; and 1 each from single antibiotic and ticarcillin plus tobramycin combination group for urticarial rash); 3 participants (1 from each group) discharged improved before completion of antibiotic course; 3 participants from single antibiotic group 3 withdrawn due to incomplete outcome data. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Low risk | Outcomes specified in methods reported in results. |
Other bias | Low risk | None identified. |
Parry 1977.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | Quasi‐RCT (alternate allocation). Parallel trial. Duration: 14 days. Symptomatic regimen. |
|
Participants | 28 participants, but some enrolled on multiple occasions giving 42 courses/data sets. Total cohort: 21 male, 21 female, mean age 15.1 years. PsA colonised. 14 participants in each of 3 treatment groups. Group 1 (ticarcillin): 8 male, 6 female; mean (range) age 16.1 (2 ‐ 30) years. Group 2 (ticarcillin & gentamicin): 7 males, 7 females: mean (range) age 16.4 (4 ‐ 30) years. Group 3 (gentamicin): 6 males, 8 females; mean (range) 12.9 (5 ‐ 31) years. This was a control group from the same study period not part of the alternate allocation. |
|
Interventions | Single group 1; ticarcillin 300 mg/kg/day, 4‐hourly. Single group 2: gentamicin 3 ‐ 4 mg/kg/day (adults), 4 ‐ 7 mg/kg/day (children). Combination group: ticarcillin 300 mg/kg/day, 4‐hourly plus gentamicin 3 ‐ 4 mg/kg/day (adults), 4 ‐ 7 mg/kg/day (children). All participants also received chest physiotherapy, bronchial drainage and aerosol therapy with mucolytics. |
|
Outcomes | Lung function, bacteriology, adverse events, CBC, sedimentation rate, urinalysis, serum electrolytes, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, liver function tests, chest radiographs, blood gas determinations, sputum cultures, change in cough, weight. | |
Notes | No data available. No withdrawals. |
|
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | No discussion of how first participant was assigned to which treatment group. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | High risk | Alternation. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | High risk | Drugs administered in different ways so clinicians and participants couldn't be blinded, no discussion of blinding of outcome assessors. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | No drop outs or withdrawals. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | High risk | Paper states that "pulmonary function tests were performed when possible", but no further details or results are given. |
Other bias | Low risk | None identified. |
Pedersen 1986.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | RCT.
Cross‐over design ‐ 3 months in between treatment arms. Duration: 14‐day course. Elective regimen. |
|
Participants | 20 participants; 3 drop outs, 17 completed trial. Age, mean: 12.6 years. Gender split: 10 male, 10 female. PsA colonised. |
|
Interventions | Single antibiotic: ceftazidime 150 mg/kg/day, 8‐hourly. Combination antibiotic: ceftazidime plus tobramycin 10 mg/kg/day, 8‐hourly. |
|
Outcomes | Lung function, inflammatory markers, development of resistant strains. | |
Notes | ||
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Described as randomised, but no details of method given. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Not discussed. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Both interventions given with same volume and in same way. NJ: described as an open study ‐ so I interpret this to mean no blinding?? |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | 3 participants excluded ‐ reasons given (bacteriological resistance developed between treatment arms in 2 participants and a 3rd withdrew on first day of 2nd treatment arm due to nausea). |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Low risk | Outcomes stated in the methods section reported in the results. |
Other bias | Low risk | None identified. |
Smith 1999.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | Double‐blind RCT. Parallel trial. Duration: 12 ‐ 14 days (but maximum duration of 31 days) with follow‐up 2 to 8 weeks later. Symptomatic regimen. |
|
Participants | 111 participants enrolled, 35 withdrawn. Total cohort (n = 76); mean (range) age 16.3 years (6 ‐ 18 years); 37 male, 39 female; PsA colonised. Single group (azlocillin) (n = 33): mean (SD) age 16.07 (7.4) years; 19 male, 14 female. Combination group (azlocillin plus tobramycin) (n = 43): mean (SD) age 16.53 (6.9) years; 18 male, 25 female. |
|
Interventions | Single group: azlocillin 450 mg/kg/day, 4‐hourly plus placebo (5% dextrose in water), 6‐hourly. Combination group: azlocillin plus tobramycin 240 mg/m²/day, 6‐hourly. |
|
Outcomes | Lung function, time to next admission, symptom scores, adverse events, bacteriology, inflammatory markers, resistant strains. | |
Notes | No data for symptom scores only narrative. | |
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Computer‐generated randomisation balance by FVC and centre. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Code generated by research pharmacist at the core centre. |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Participants and clinicians blinded, serum concentrations monitored by unblinded 3rd party (research pharmacist). |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | 35 out of 111 participants withdrawn (21 from azlocillin group), reasons given in a table. SS: should this be unclear or high risk because more than 15% dropped out? |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Outcomes described in the methods are reported in the results, but some just brief narrative statements. |
Other bias | Low risk | None identified. |
CBC: complete blood count CF: cystic fibrosis CXR: chest x‐ray ITT: intention‐to‐treat PsA: Pseudomonas aeruginosa RCT: randomised controlled trial
Characteristics of excluded studies [ordered by study ID]
Study | Reason for exclusion |
---|---|
Adeboyeku 2011 | Comparison of twice daily vs three times daily antibiotics, not single vs combination. |
Al‐Aloul 2004 | Comparison of two single IV antibiotics, not single vs combination. |
Al‐Aloul 2019 | No single IV AB arm, both groups got two IV AB treatments and one group additionally got fosfomycin. |
Al‐Ansari 2006 | Comparison of once vs multiple daily dosing, not single vs combination. |
Aminimanizani 2002 | Comparison of single vs multiple daily dosing, not single vs combination. |
Balsamo 1986 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Beaudry 1980 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Beringer 2012 | Not a comparison of single vs combination antibiotics; a comparison of a single intravenous dose of an antibiotic and multiple oral doses of the same antibiotic. |
Blumer 2005 | Comparison of two combination regimens. |
Bosso 1988 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
CFMATTERS 2017 | Comparison of 2 antibiotics with the same 2 antibiotics plus a 3rd microbiome‐derived antibiotic treatment. |
Church 1997 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Conway 1997 | Comparison of colistin with multiple antibiotic combinations. |
De Boeck 1989 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
De Boeck 1999 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Donati 1987 | Home vs hospital therapy, not single vs combination. |
Enaud 2017 | Comparison of IV antibiotics and control, not single vs combination IV regimen. |
Gold 1985 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Hatziagorou 2013 | Not a comparison of a single vs combination antibiotics; evaluation of tool to assess treatment response in children. |
Hoogkamp 1983 | Non‐randomised study: first 7 participants allocated to single treatment; next 7 to combination treatment with marked differences in baseline characteristics. |
Hubert 2009 | Comparison of intermittent vs continuous infusions, not single vs combination. |
Hyatt 1981 | Comparison of anti‐staphylococcal drug (oxacillin) vs oxacillin plus 2 anti‐pseudomonal drugs. |
Jewett 1985 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Keel 2011 | Not a comparison of a single vs combination antibiotic; comparison of intravenous and oral versions of the same agent. |
Kenny 2009 | Study of eradication of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, not a comparison of single vs combination. |
Krause 1979 | Pseudo‐randomised study. Treatment and comparison groups were not sufficiently similar at baseline. |
Kuni 1992 | Not a comparison of single vs combination antibiotics. |
Levy 1982 | Comparison of 2 single agents. |
McCabe 2013 | Not a comparison of single vs combination antibiotics; evaluation of a twice‐daily tobramycin regimen. |
Moskowitz 2011 | Comparison of IV antibiotics using standard vs biofilm susceptibility testing of P. aeruginosa sputum isolates. |
NCT01044719 | Comparison of duration of antibiotic treatment not comparing single vs combination antibiotics. |
NCT01667094 | Comparison of intermittent vs continuous IV regimens, not a comparison of single vs combination antibiotics. |
NCT01694069 | Comparison of timing of administration of the same IV antibiotic combination, not single vs combination. |
NCT02421120 | Comparison of IV antibiotics, but not randomised. |
NCT02918409 | Comparison of 2 single antibiotics. |
NCT03066453 | Single IV vs combination IV antibiotics plus nebulised antibiotic. |
Nelson 1985 | Review article on single vs combination antibiotic treatment, i.e. not an RCT. |
Noah 2010 | Inhaled vs systemic antibiotics. |
Padoan 1987 | Reported number of courses of treatment instead of number of people included. Some participants may have been counted twice or included in both treatment group therefore analysis unclear. |
Park 2018 | Comparison of oral vs IV antibiotics for treating MRSA not Pseudomonas aeruginosa. |
Permin 1983 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Prayle 2016 | Not a comparison of single vs combination antibiotics; comparison of morning vs evening intravenous tobramycin. |
Riethmueller 2009 | Continuous vs intermittent infusions. |
Roberts 1993 | Randomisation method unclear ‐ participants appeared to have been randomised to single or combination therapy each morning using a cross‐over method. |
Semykin 2010 | Not a comparison of single vs combination antibiotics; trial of inhaled tobramycin therapy. |
Stack 1985 | Comparison of single agent compared with two other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
STOP 2 2018 | Comparison of duration of antibiotic treatment not comparing single vs combination antibiotics. |
TORPEDO 2018 | An eradication trial comparing oral antibiotics plus inhaled antibiotics to IV antibiotics plus inhaled antibiotics ‐ so not a comparison of single or combination IV antibiotics. |
Turner 2013 | Not a comparison of single vs combination antibiotics; study of continuous vs intermittent infusion piperacillin‐tazobactam. |
Wesley 1988 | Comparison of single agent compared with 2 other antibiotics (i.e. drug A vs drug B plus drug C). |
Whitehead 2002 | Efficacy of once daily tobramycin, not a comparison of single vs combination agents. |
CXR: chest X‐ray IV: intravenous vs: versus
Differences between protocol and review
For this 2021 update of the review, in our outcome measures we have replace the term 'improvement' with 'change' to reflect that changes may not always be improvements. For this update we have also added two new summaryof findnigs tables.
It was noted that a previous review team had additionally reported on clinical scores and antibiotic resistance after the outcomes in the original protocol were published. We agree that these are important clinical outcomes and should be included in the review.
Contributions of authors
Current review version
Dr Poppy Holland updated the additional searches, checked the previously included trials and drafted the text of the review.
Nikki Jahnke helped draft the text of the review.
Previous versions of the review
Dr Anton Tan assisted in the assessment of trial quality and extraction of data up until 2013.
Dr Heather Elphick performed the updates and acts as guarantor of the review. Dr Alison Scott joined the author team as a co‐author from the update in 2016.
Sources of support
Internal sources
No sources of support provided
External sources
-
National Institute for Health Research, UK
This systematic review was supported by the National Institute for Health Research, via Cochrane Infrastructure funding to the Cochrane Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Group.
Declarations of interest
Dr Poppy Holland has no potential conflict of interest to declare.
Nikki Jahnke has no potential conflict of interest to declare.
Stable (no update expected for reasons given in 'What's new')
References
References to studies included in this review
Costantini 1982 {published data only}
- Costantini D, Padoan R, Brienza A, Lodi G, Assael BM, Giunta A. Clinical evaluation of carbenicillin and sisomycin alone or in combination in CF patients with pulmonary exacerbations. In: Proceedings of the 11th European Cystic Fibrosis Conference. 1982:227. [CFGD REGISTER: PI122]
Huang 1982 {published data only}
- Huang N, Palmer J, Schidlow D, Hsuan F, Hsu C, Goldberg M, et al. Evaluation of antibiotic therapy in patients with cystic fibrosis. Chest 1979;76(3):354-355. [CFGD REGISTER: PI113a] [Google Scholar]
- Huang NN, Palmer J, Braverman S, Keith HH, Schidlow D. Therapeutic efficacy of ticarcillin and carbenicillin in patients with cystic fibrosis: a double blind study. In: 23rd Cystic Fibrosis Club Abstracts; 1982 May 14; Washington DC. 1982:124. [CFGD REGISTER: PI113b]
Master 1997 {published data only}
- Master V, Martin AJ, Holmes M, Roberts G, Coulthard K. Once daily tobramycin monotherapy versus conventional antibiotic therapy for the treatment of pseudomonal pulmonary exacerbations in cystic fibrosis patients. European Respiratory Journal 1997;10(Suppl 25):162s. [CFGD REGISTER: PI148a] [Google Scholar]
- Master V, Roberts GW, Coulhard KP, Baghurst PA, Martin A, Roberts ME et al. Efficacy of once-daily tobramycin monotherapy for acute pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis: a preliminary study. Pediatric Pulmonology 2001;31(5):367-76. [CFGD REGISTER: PI148b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
McCarty 1988 {published data only}
- McCarty JM, Tilden SJ, Black P, Craft JC, Blumer J, Waring W et al. Comparison of piperacillin alone versus piperacillin plus tobramycin for treatment of respiratory infections in children with cystic fibrosis. Pediatric Pulmonology 1988;4(4):201-4. [CFGD REGISTER: PI58] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
McLaughlin 1983 {published data only}
- McLaughlin FJ, Matthews WJ, Strieder DJ, Sullivan B, Taneja A, Murphy P et al. Clinical and bacteriological responses to three antibiotic regimens for acute exacerbations of cystic fibrosis: ticarcillin-tobramycin, azlocillin-tobramycin and azlocillin-placebo. The Journal of Infectious Diseases 1983;147(3):559-66. [CFGD REGISTER: PI26b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- McLaughlin FJ, Matthews WJ Jr, Strieder DJ, Sullivan B, Goldmann DA. Randomized, double-blind evaluation of azlocillin for the treatment of pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 1983;11 Suppl B:195-203. [CFGD REGISTER: PI26a] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Parry 1977 {published data only}
- Parry MF, Neu HC, Merlino M, Gaerlan PF, Ores CN, Denning CR. Treatment of pulmonary infections in patients with cystic fibrosis: a comparative study of ticarcillin and gentamicin. Journal of Pediatrics 1977;90(1):144-8. [CFGD REGISTER: PI17] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Pedersen 1986 {published data only}
- Pedersen SS, Pressler T, Pedersen M, Hoiby N, Friis-Moller A, Kock C. Immediate and prolonged clinical efficacy of Ceftazidime versus Ceftazidime plus Tobramycin in chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in cystic fibrosis. Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases 1986;18:133-7. [CFGD REGISTER: PI42] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Smith 1999 {published data only}
- Smith AL, Doershuk C, Goldmann D, Gore E, Hilman B, Marks M et al. Comparison of a B-lactam alone versus B-lactam and an aminoglycoside for pulmonary exacerbation in cystic fibrosis. Journal of Pediatrics 1999;134(4):413-21. [CFGD REGISTER: PI152] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
References to studies excluded from this review
Adeboyeku 2011 {published data only}
- Adeboyeku D, Jones AL, Hodson ME. Twice vs three-times daily antibiotics in the treatment of pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2011;10(1):25-30. [CFGD REGISTER: PI243] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Al‐Aloul 2004 {published data only}
- Al-Aloul M, Miller H, Browning P, Ledson MJ, Walshaw MJ. A randomised cross over trial of TOBI« vs IV tobramycin in acute pulmonary exacerbations in CF. Pediatric Pulmonology 2004;38 Suppl 27:249. [CFGD REGISTER: PI186a] [Google Scholar]
- Al-Aloul M, Miller H, Ledson MJ, Walshaw MJ. Tobramycin nebuliser solution (TOBI): a renal sparing alternative to intravenous (IV) tobramycin in acute pulmonary exacerbations in CF. Thorax 2004;59(Suppl II):ii79. [CENTRAL: 517107] [CFGD REGISTER: PI186d] [Google Scholar]
- Al-Aloul M, Miller H, Ledson MJ, Walshaw MJ. Tobramycin nebuliser solution in the treatment of cystic fibrosis pulmonary exacerbations: effect on sputum pseudomonas aeruginosa density. Thorax 2005;2(Suppl 2):ii92. [CFGD REGISTER: PI186b] [Google Scholar]
- Al-Aloul M, Nazareth D, Walshaw M. Nebulized tobramycin in the treatment of adult CF pulmonary exacerbations. Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery 2014;27(4):299-305. [CFGD REGISTER: PI186c] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Al‐Aloul 2019 {published data only}
- Al-Aloul M, Nazareth D, Walshaw M. The renoprotective effect of concomitant fosfomycin in the treatment of pulmonary exacerbations in cystic fibrosis. Clinical Kidney Journal 2019;12(5):652-8. [CENTRAL: CN-01995525] [CFGD REGISTER: CO78] [EMBASE: 629595070] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Al‐Ansari 2006 {published data only}
- Al-Ansari N, McKeon D, Parmer J, Gunn E, Foweraker J, Bilton D. Efficacy of once daily tobramycin for acute pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis (CF) - a microbiological perspective [abstract]. Thorax 2001;56(Suppl 3):iii85. [CFGD REGISTER: PI173a] [Google Scholar]
- Al Ansari NA, Foweraker J, Mackeown D, Bilton D. Evaluation of once daily tobramycin versus the traditional three times daily for the treatment of acute pulmonary exacerbations in adult cystic fibrosis patients [abstract]. Qatar Medical Journal 2006;15(1):34-8. [CFGD REGISTER: PI173b] [Google Scholar]
Aminimanizani 2002 {published data only}
- Aminimanizani A, Beringer PM, Kang J, Tsang L, Jelliffe RW, Shapiro BJ. Distribution and elimination of tobramycin administered in single or multiple daily doses in adult patients with cystic fibrosis. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 2002;50(4):553-9. [CFGD REGISTER: PI158b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Tsang L, Aminimanizani A, Beringer PM, Jelliffe R, Shapiro B. Pharmacokinetics of once-daily tobramycin in adult cystic fibrosis patients [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2000;30(Suppl 20):284. [CFGD REGISTER: PI158a] [Google Scholar]
Balsamo 1986 {published data only}
- Balsamo V, Bragion E, Iapichino L, Natozi D, Pardo F. Clinical efficacy and "in vitro" activity of some antibiotics, ceftazidime aztreonam or carbenicillin with aminoglycosides against Pseudomonas in Cystic fibrosis patients [abstract]. In: 14th Annual Meeting of the European Working Group for Cystic Fibrosis. 1986:63. [CFGD REGISTER: PI84]
Beaudry 1980 {published data only}
- Beaudry PH, Marks MI, McDougall D, Desmond K, Rangel R. Is anti-Pseudomonas therapy warranted in acute respiratory exacerbations in children with cystic fibrosis? Journal of Pediatrics 1980;97(1):144-7. [CFGD REGISTER: PI21a] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Beaudry PH, Marks MI, Rangel R, McDougall D, Desmond K. Is anti-pseudomonas therapy warranted in acute respiratory exacerbations in children with cystic fibrosis? [abstract]. In: 20th Annual Meeting Cystic Fibrosis Club Abstracts; 1979 May 1; Atlanta, Georgia. 1979:1. [CFGD REGISTER: PI21b] [DOI] [PubMed]
Beringer 2012 {published data only}
- Beringer P, Owens H, Nguyen A, Benitez D, Boyd-King A, Rao AP. Safety, pharmacokinetics and preliminary evaluation of the antiinflammatory effect of doxycycline in CF [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2010;45 Suppl 33:370, Abstract no: 422. [CFGD REGISTER: PI256a] 5500100000011256 [Google Scholar]
- Beringer PM, Owens H, Nguyen A, Benitez D, Rao A, D'Argenio DZ. Pharmacokinetics of doxycycline in adults with cystic fibrosis. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2012;56(1):70-4. [CFGD REGISTER: PI256b] 5500100000011269 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Blumer 2005 {published data only}
- Blumer JL, Minkwitz M, Saiman L, San Gabriel P, Iaconis J, Melnick D. Meropenem (MEM) compared with ceftazidime (CAZ) in combination with tobramycin (TOB) for treatment of acute pulmonary exacerbations (APE) in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) or Burkholderia cepacia (BC) [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2003;Suppl 25:294. [CFGD REGISTER: PI179a] 5500100000002583 [Google Scholar]
- Blumer JL, Saiman L, Konstan MW, Melnick D. The efficacy and safety of meropenem and tobramycin vs ceftazidime and tobramycin in the treatment of acute pulmonary exacerbations in patients with cystic fibrosis. Chest 2005;128(4):2336-46. [CENTRAL: 531312] [CFGD REGISTER: PI179b] [PMID: ] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Bosso 1988 {published data only}
- Bosso JA, Black PG. A comparative trial of aztreonam and tobramycin plus azlocillin [abstract]. Excerpta medica, Asia Pacific Congress Series 1988;74:R(c)17. [CFGD REGISTER: PI59a] [Google Scholar]
- Bosso JA, Black PG. Controlled trial of aztreonam vs tobramycin and azlocillin for acute pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. Pediatric Infectious Diseases Journal 1988;7(3):171-6. [CFGD REGISTER: PI59b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
CFMATTERS 2017 {published data only}
- Einarsson G, Flanagan E, Lee A, Elborn JS, Tunney M, Plant BJ. Longitudinal airway microbiota profiling in cystic fibrosis patients enrolled in the CFMATTERS clinical trial. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2017;16 (Supplement 1):S4. [ABSTRACT NO.: WS03.1] [CFGD REGISTER: PI295] [Google Scholar]
- NCT02526004. Cystic fibrosis microbiome-determined antibiotic therapy trial in exacerbations: results stratified (CFMATTERS). clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02526004 (first posted 18 August 2015).
Church 1997 {published data only}
- Church DA, Kanga JF, Kuhn RJ, Rubio TT, Spohn WA, Stevens JC, et al. Sequential ciprofloxacin therapy in pediatric cystic fibrosis: comparative study vs. ceftazidime/tobramycin in the treatment of acute pulmonary exacerbations. Pediatric Infectious Diseases Journal 1997;16(1):97-105. [CFGD REGISTER: PI115] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Conway 1997 {published data only}
- Conway SP, Pond M, Watson A, Etherington C, Robey HL, Goldman MH. Intravenous colistin sulphomethate in acute respiratory exacerbations in adult patients with cystic fibrosis. Thorax 1997;52(11):987-93. [CFGD REGISTER: PI103c] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Conway SP, Pond M, Watson A, Robey H, Goldman M. A safety profile of intravenous colomycin in adult care [abstract]. In: 20th European Cystic Fibrosis; 1995 June 18-21; Brussels, Belgium. 1995:P3. [CFGD REGISTER: PI103a]
- Conway SP, Pond MN, Watson AJ, Robey H, Goldman MH. Colistin alone or in combination with a second antibiotic is effective in the treatment of respiratory exacerbations in cystic fibrosis [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 1996;Suppl 13:296. [CFGD REGISTER: PI103b] [Google Scholar]
De Boeck 1989 {published data only}
- Boeck K, Smet M, Eggermont E. Treatment of Pseudomonas lung infection in cystic fibrosis with piperacillin plus tobramycin versus ceftazidime monotherapy. Pediatric Pulmonology 1989;7(3):171-3. [CFGD REGISTER: PI61] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
De Boeck 1999 {published data only}
- Boeck K, Sauer K, Vandeputte S. Meropenem versus ceftazidime plus tobramycin for pulmonary disease in CF patients [abstract]. The Netherlands Journal of Medicine 1999;54:S39. [CFGD REGISTER: PI150] [Google Scholar]
Donati 1987 {published data only}
- Donati MA, Guenette G, Auerbach H. Prospective controlled study of home and hospital therapy of cystic fibrosis pulmonary disease. Journal of Pediatrics 1987;111(1):28-33. [CFGD REGISTER: PI143] [MEDLINE: ] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Enaud 2017 {published data only}
- Enaud R, Bazin T, Barre A, Barnetche T, Hubert C, Clouzeau H, et al. Impact of intravenous antibiotics on the gut microbiota in children with cystic fibrosis. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2017;16(Suppl 1):S111. [ABSTRACT NO.: 173] [CFGD REGISTER: GN272a] [Google Scholar]
Gold 1985 {published data only}
- Gold R, Jin E, Levison H, Isles A, Fleming PC. Ceftazidime alone and in combination in patients with cystic fibrosis: lack of efficacy in treatment of severe respiratory infections caused by Pseudomonas cepacia. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 1983;12(Suppl A):331-6. [CFGD REGISTER: PI35b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Gold R, Overmeyer A, Knie B, Fleming PC, Levison H. Controlled trial of ceftazidime vs ticarcillin and tobramycin in the treatment of acute respiratory exacerbations in patients with cystic fibrosis. Pediatric Infectious Disease 1985;4(2):172-7. [CFGD REGISTER: PI35a] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Hatziagorou 2013 {published data only}
- Hatziagorou E, Avramidou V, Kirvassilis F, Tsanakas J. Lung clearance index: a tool to assess the response to intravenous treatment among children with cystic fibrosis [abstract]. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2013;12 Suppl 1:S26, Abstract no: WS13.3. [CFGD REGISTER: PI265] 5500100000011544 [Google Scholar]
Hoogkamp 1983 {published data only}
- Hoogkamp-Korstanje JA, Laag J. Piperacillin and tobramycin in the treatment of Pseudomonas lung infections in cystic fibrosis. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 1983;12(2):175-83. [CFGD REGISTER: PI140] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Hubert 2009 {published data only}
- Hubert D, Le Roux E, Lavrut T, Wallaert B, Scheid P, Manach D, et al. Continuous versus intermittent infusions of ceftazidime for treating exacerbation of cystic fibrosis. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2009;53(9):3650-6. [CFGD REGISTER: PI180b] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Hubert D, Wallaert B, Scheid P, Ramel S, Grenet D, Sermet-Gaudelus I, et al. Continuous infusion versus intermittent administration of ceftazidime in cystic fibrosis patients [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2003;Suppl 25:294. [CFGD REGISTER: PI180a] [Google Scholar]
- NCT00333385. Continuous versus short infusions of ceftazidime in cystic fibrosis. clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00333385 (first received 05 June 2006). [CENTRAL: CN-01482081] [CFGD REGISTER: PI180c]
Hyatt 1981 {published data only}
- Hyatt AC, Chipps BE, Kumor KM, Mellits ED, Lietman PS, Rosenstein BJ. A double-blind controlled trial of anti-Pseudomonas chemotherapy of acute respiratory exacerbations in patients with cystic fibrosis. Journal of Pediatrics 1981;99(2):307-11. [CFGD REGISTER: PI23] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Jewett 1985 {published data only}
- Jewett CV, Ledbetter J, Lyrene RK, Brasfield DM, Tiller RE. Comparison of cefoperazone sodium vs methicillin, ticarcillin and tobramycin in treatment of pulmonary exacerbations in patients with cystic fibrosis. Journal of Pediatrics 1985;106(4):669-72. [CFGD REGISTER: PI36] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Keel 2011 {published data only}
- Keel RA, Schaeftlein A, Kloft C, Pope JS, Knauft RF, Muhlebach M, et al. Pharmacokinetics of intravenous and oral linezolid in adults with cystic fibrosis. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2011;55(7):3393-8. [CFGD REGISTER: PI251] 5500100000005261 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Kenny 2009 {published data only}
- Kenny S, Hall V, Goldsmith C, Moore J, Rendall JC, Elborn JS. Eradication of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in adults with CF [abstract]. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2009;8(Suppl 2):S39, Abstract no: 158. [CFGD REGISTER: PI229] [Google Scholar]
Krause 1979 {published data only}
- Krause PJ, Young LS, Cherry JD, Osher AB, Spencer MJ, Bryson YJ. The treatment of exacerbations of pulmonary disease in cystic fibrosis: netilmicin compared with netilmicin and carbenicillin. Current Therapeutic Research Clinical and Experimental 1979;25:609. [CFGD REGISTER: PI166] [Google Scholar]
Kuni 1992 {published data only}
- Kuni CC, Regelmann WE, duCret RP, Boudreau RJ, Budd JR. Aerosol scintigraphy in the assessment of therapy for cystic fibrosis. Clinical Nuclear Medicine 1992;17(2):90-3. [CFGD REGISTER: PI236] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Levy 1982 {published data only}
- Levy J, Baran D, Klastersky J. Comparative study of the antibacterial activity of amikacin and tobramycin during Pseudomonas pulmonary infection in patients with cystic fibrosis. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 1982;10(3):227-34. [CFGD REGISTER: PI134] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
McCabe 2013 {published data only}
- McCabe D, Rodgers HC. Evaluation of a twice daily tobramycin regimen in adult cystic fibrosis patients [abstract]. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2013;12 Suppl 1:S71, Abstract no: 89. [CFGD REGISTER: PI266] 5500100000011543 [Google Scholar]
Moskowitz 2011 {published data only}
- Moskowitz SM, Emerson JC, McNamara S, Shell RD, Orenstein DM, Rosenbluth D, et al. Randomized trial of biofilm testing to select antibiotics for cystic fibrosis airway infection. Pediatric Pulmonology 2011;46(2):184-92. [CFGD REGISTER: PI245] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- NCT00153634. Standard vs. biofilm susceptibility testing in cystic fibrosis (CF). clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00153634 (first posted 12 September 2005).
NCT01044719 {published data only}
- EUCTR2009-014042-28-GB. What duration of intravenous antibiotic therapy should be used in the treatment of infective exacerbations of cystic fibrosis in patients chronically colonised with Pseudomonas aeruginosa? - Duration of antibiotics in infective exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. www.who.int/trialsearch/Trial2.aspx?TrialID=EUCTR2009-014042-28-GB (first received 14 October 2010). [CENTRAL: CN-01814720] [CFGD REGISTER: PI314b]
- NCT01044719. Duration of antibiotics in infective exacerbations of cystic fibrosis [What duration of intravenous antibiotic therapy should BE used in the treatment of infective exacerbations of cystic fibrosis chronically colonised with pseudomonas aeruginosa]. clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01044719 (first received 08 January 2010). [CENTRAL: CN-01527525] [CFGD REGISTER: PI314a]
NCT01667094 {published data only}
- NCT01667094. A study comparing continuous infusion antibiotics to standard treatment for lung infections in cystic fibrosis (CISTIC). clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01667094 (first posted 17 August 2012).
NCT01694069 {published data only}
- NCT01694069. Continuous infusion piperacillin-tazobactam for the treatment of cystic fibrosis (PIPE-CF). clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01694069 (first posted 26 September 2012).
NCT02421120 {published data only}
- NCT02421120. Population pharmacokinetics and safety of intravenous ceftolozane/tazobactam in adult cystic fibrosis patients. clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02421120 (first posted 20 April 2015).
NCT02918409 {published data only}
- NCT02918409. IV colistin for pulmonary exacerbations: improving safety and efficacy. clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02918409 (first posted 29 September 2016).
NCT03066453 {published data only}
- EUCTR2014-003882-10-FR. Evaluation of the efficacy of antibiotic treatments associated with the Nebcine® as intravenous injection only and / or monitoring of aerosols of Tobi® in order to optimize the therapeutic management of exacerbations in patients with cystic fibrosis [Evaluation of the effectiveness of a treatment involving one (or several) antibiotic (s) with 14-day tobramycin (Nebcine®) by intravenous injection versus the same antibiotic treatment (s ) associated with only 5 days of tobramycin (Nebcine®) by intravenous injection followed tobramycin aerosol (Tobi®) for 9 days in the context of cystic fibrosis]. www.who.int/trialsearch/Trial2.aspx?TrialID=EUCTR2014-003882-10-FR (first received 29 July 2015). [CENTRAL: CN-01891517] [CFGD REGISTER: PI313a]
- NCT03066453. Evaluation of short antibiotic combination courses followed by aerosols in cystic fibrosis (TOBRAMUC). clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03066453 (first posted 28 February 2017). [CFGD REGISTER: PI313b]
Nelson 1985 {published data only}
- Jackson MA, Kusmiesz H, Shelton S, Prestidge C, Kramer RI, Nelson JD. Comparison of piperacillin vs. ticarcillin plus tobramycin in the treatment of acute pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. Pediatric Infectious Disease 1986;5(4):440-3. [CFGD REGISTER: PI38b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Nelson JD. Management of acute pulmonary exacerbations in cystic fibrosis: a critical appraisal. Journal of Pediatrics 1985;106:1030-4. [CFGD REGISTER: PI38a] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Noah 2010 {published data only}
- Noah T, Ivins S, Abode K, Harris W, Henry M, Leigh M. Comparison of antibiotics for early pseudomonas infection in CF: interim data analysis [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2007;42 Suppl 30:332. [CFGD REGISTER: PI205a] [Google Scholar]
- Noah TL, Ivins SS, Abode KA, Stewart PW, Michelson PH, Harris WT, et al. Inhaled versus systemic antibiotics and airway inflammation in children with cystic fibrosis and Pseudomonas. Pediatric Pulmonology 2010;45(3):281-90. [CFGD REGISTER: PI205b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Padoan 1987 {published data only}
- Padoan R, Cambisano W, Constantini D, Crossignani R, Giunta A. Pseudomonas pulmonary infections in cystic fibrosis: Ceftazidime vs ceftazidime plus sisomicin vs piperacillin plus sisomicin [abstract]. In: 9th International Cystic Fibrosis Congress; 1984 June 9-15; Brighton, England. 1984:Poster 4.21. [CFGD REGISTER: PI52a]
- Padoan R, Cambisano W, Costantini D, Crossignani RM, Danza ML, Trezzi G et al. Ceftazidime monotherapy vs combined therapy in Pseudomonas pulmonary infections in cystic fibrosis. Pediatric Infectious Diseases Journal 1987;6(7):648-53. [CFGD REGISTER: PI52b] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Park 2018 {published data only}
- NCT02444234. Pharmacokinetics of tedizolid phosphate in cystic fibrosis [Steady-state pharmacokinetics of tedizolid in plasma and sputum of patients with cystic fibrosis]. clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT02444234 (first received 06 May 2015). [CENTRAL: CN-01506473] [CFGD REGISTER: PI311c]
- Park AYJ, Wang J, Jayne J, Fukushima L, Rao AP, D'Argenio DZ, et al. Pharmacokinetics of tedizolid in plasma and sputum of adults with cystic fibrosis. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2018;62(9):e00550-18. [CENTRAL: CN-01646308] [CFGD REGISTER: PI311a] [EMBASE: 623617157] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Wang J, Park J, Jayne J, Bensman T, D'Argenio D, Fukushima L, et al. Pharmacokinetics of tedizolid in adults with cystic fibrosis. Open Forum Infectious Diseases 2017;4:S293. [CENTRAL: CN-01957643] [CFGD REGISTER: PI311b] [EMBASE: 628090576] [Google Scholar]
Permin 1983 {published data only}
- Permin H, Koch C, Hoiby N, Christensen HO, Moller AF, Moller S. Ceftazidime treatment of chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa respiratory tract infection in cystic fibrosis. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 1983;12(Suppl A):313-23. [CFGD REGISTER: PI29] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Prayle 2016 {published data only}
- Prayle A, Jain K, Watson A, Smyth AR. Are morning doses of intravenous tobramycin less nephrotoxic than evening? Evidence from urinary biomarkers in the critic study [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2013;48 Suppl 36:299, Abstract no: 261. [CENTRAL: 980338] [CFGD REGISTER: CO55] [Google Scholar]
- Prayle AP, Jain K, Touw DJ, Koch BCP, Knox AJ, Watson A, et al. The pharmacokinetics and toxicity of morning vs. evening tobramycin dosing for pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis: a randomised comparison. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2016;15(4):510-7. [CFGD REGISTER: CO55b] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Riethmueller 2009 {published data only}
- Riethmueller J, Ballmann M, Schroeter TW, Franke P, Butler R, Claass A, et al. Tobramycin once- vs thrice-daily for elective intravenous antipseudomonal therapy in pediatric cystic fibrosis patients. Infection 2009;37(5):424-31. [CFGD REGISTER: PI154f] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Riethmueller J, Busch A, Franke P, Ziebach R, Butler R, Stern M. Pharmacodynamic variation of intravenous antibiotic treatment with ceftazidime and tobramycin in CF-patients is equally effective [abstract]. In: 13th International Cystic Fibrosis Congress; 2000 June 4-8; Stockholm, Sweden. 2000:166. [CFGD REGISTER: PI154a]
- Riethmueller J, Franke P, Schroeter TW, Claass A, Busch A, Ziebach R, et al. Optimised intravenous antibiotic treatment with ceftazidime (thrice daily vs continuous) and tobramycin (thrice vs once daily) in CF patients [abstract]. In: 24th European Cystic Fibrosis Conference; 2001 June 6-9; Vienna, Austria. 2001:P192. [CFGD REGISTER: PI154b]
- Riethmueller J, Junge S, Schroeter TW, Kuemmerer K, Franke P, Ballmann M, et al. Continuous vs thrice-daily ceftazidime for elective intravenous antipseudomonal therapy in cystic fibrosis. Infection 2009;37(5):418-23. [CFGD REGISTER: PI154e] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Schroeter T, Eggert P, Riethmueller J, Stern M, Claass A. Acute-phase nephrotoxicity of tobramycin in CF patients: A prospective randomized trial of once-versus thrice-daily dosing [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2002;Suppl 24:289. [CFGD REGISTER: PI154d] [Google Scholar]
- Schroeter TW, Eggert P, Riethmueller J, Stern M, Claass A. A prospective randomized trial on the nephrotoxicity of thrice-daily versus once-daily tobramycin in cystic fibrosis patients [abstract]. In: 24th European Cystic Fibrosis Conference; 2001 June 6-9; Vienna, Austria. 2001:P190. [CFGD REGISTER: PI154c]
Roberts 1993 {published data only}
- Roberts GW, Nation RL, Jarvinen AO, Martin AJ. An in vivo assessment of the tobramycin/ticarcillin interaction in cystic fibrosis patients. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 1993;36(4):372-5. [CFGD REGISTER: PI132a] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Roberts GW, Nation RL, Jarvinen AO. Measurement of serum tobramycin in the presence of ticarcillin or piperacillin. Australian Journal of Hospital Pharmacy 1992;22(2):152-4. [CFGD REGISTER: PI132b] [Google Scholar]
Semykin 2010 {published data only}
- Semykin SY, Polikarpova SV, Dubovik LG, Kashirskaya NY. Efficiency of the inhalational tobramycin therapy in complex antibacterial therapy of lung exacerbation in cystic fibrosis children with chronic pseudomonas aeruginosa infection [abstract]. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2010;9 Suppl 1:S55, Abstract no: 214. [CFGD REGISTER: PI246] 5500100000005273 [Google Scholar]
Stack 1985 {published data only}
- British Thoracic Society Research Committee. Ceftazidime compared with gentamicin and carbenicillin in patients with cystic fibrosis, pulmonary pseudomonas infection, and an exacerbation of respiratory symptoms. Thorax 1985;40(5):358-63. [CFGD REGISTER: PI37a] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Stack BHR, Geddes DM, Williams KJ, Dinwiddie R, Selkon JB, Godfrey RC. Ceftazidime compared with a combination of gentamicin and carbenicillin in cystic fibrosis patients with persistent pulmonary pseudomonas infection and an acute exacerbation of respiratory symptoms [abstract]. In: 9th International Cystic Fibrosis Congress; 1984 June 9-15; Brighton, England. 1984:4.16. [CFGD REGISTER: PI37b]
STOP 2 2018 {published data only}
- Flume PA, Heltshe SL, West NE, Vandevanter DR, Sanders DB, Skalland M, et al. Design, enrollment, and feasibility of the STOP-2 randomised study of intravenous antibiotic treatment duration in cystic fibrosis pulmonary exacerbations. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2018;17 Suppl 3:S85. [CENTRAL: CN-01746294] [CFGD REGISTER: PI298a] [EMBASE: 622930903] [Google Scholar]
- Heltshe S, West NE, VanDevanter DR, Sanders DB, Skalland M, Beckett V, et al. Design, enrolment, and feasibility of the STOP-2 randomised study of iv antibiotic duration in CF pulmonary exacerbations. Pediatric Pulmonology 2017;52(Suppl 47):388. [CENTRAL: CN-01430878] [CFGD REGISTER: PI298b] [EMBASE: 619069634] [Google Scholar]
- Heltshe SL, West NE, VanDevanter DR, Sanders DB, Beckett VV, Flume PA, et al. Study design considerations for the Standardized Treatment of Pulmonary Exacerbations 2 (STOP2): a trial to compare intravenous antibiotic treatment durations in CF. Contemporary Clinical Trials 2018;64:35-40. [CENTRAL: CN-01668982] [CFGD REGISTER: PI298c] [EMBASE: 624669955] [PMID: ] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Sanders DB, Heltshe S, West NE, VanDevanter DR, Skalland M, Flume P, et al. Update on the STOP-2 randomized study of IV antibiotic duration in CF pulmonary exacerbations. Pediatric Pulmonology 2018;53(S2):324. [CENTRAL: CN-01738944] [CFGD REGISTER: PI298d] [EMBASE: 624049033] [Google Scholar]
- West NE. Treatment of pulmonary exacerbations. Pediatric Pulmonology 2017;52(Suppl 47):124-6. [CENTRAL: CN-01430915] [CFGD REGISTER: PI298e] [CTG: ] [EMBASE: 619068504] [Google Scholar]
TORPEDO 2018 {published data only}
- Cazares A, Figueroa W, Kenna D, Langton-Hewer S, Smyth A, Winstanley C. Comparative genomics study of a set of Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates from the TORPEDO-CF trial. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2019;18(Suppl 1):S1. [ABSTRACT NO.: WS01-2] [CENTRAL: CN-01989497] [CFGD REGISTER: PI299h] [EMBASE: 2001976388] [Google Scholar]
- EUCTR2009-012575-10-SE. Trial of optimal therapy for pseudomonas eradication in cystic fibrosis - TORPEDO-CF. www.who.int/trialsearch/Trial2.aspx?TrialID=EUCTR2009-012575-10-SE (first received 16 November 2016). [CENTRAL: CN-01798235] [CFGD REGISTER: PI299d]
- ISRCTN02734162. Trial of optimal therapy for pseudomonas eradication in cystic fibrosis. www.who.int/trialsearch/Trial2.aspx?TrialID=ISRCTN02734162 (first received 22 May 2009). [CENTRAL: CN-01807478] [CFGD REGISTER: PI299f]
- Langton Hewer S, Hickey H, Jones A, Blundell M, Smyth AR. TORPEDO-CF-completion of recruitment to trial of optimal regimen for eradication of new infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2017;16(Suppl 1):S80. [ABSTRACT NO.: 63] [CFGD REGISTER: PI299a] [Google Scholar]
- Langton Hewer S, Smyth AR, Jones A, Williamson P. Torpedo-CF – trial of optimal therapy for pseudomonas eradication in cystic fibrosis. Pediatric Pulmonology 2018;53(S2):294. [CFGD REGISTER: PI299b] [Google Scholar]
- Langton Hewer SC, Smyth AR, Jones AP, Brown M, Hickey H, Williamson PR, et al. Effectiveness of IV compared to oral eradication therapy of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis: multicentre randomised controlled trial (TORPEDO-CF). Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2019;18 Suppl 1:S1. [ABSTRACT NO.: WS01-1] [CENTRAL: CN-01986089] [CFGD REGISTER: PI299g] [EMBASE: 2001976729] [Google Scholar]
- Smyth AR, Langton Hewer S, Brown M, Jones A, Hickey H, Kenna D, et al. Intravenous vs oral antibiotics for eradication of pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis (Torpedo-CF): a randomised controlled trial. Pediatric Pulmonology 2019;54(S2):302. [ABSTRACT NO.: 390] [CENTRAL: CN-01986111] [CFGD REGISTER: PI299i] [EMBASE: 629388639] [Google Scholar]
- TORPEDO-CF. www.controlled-trials.com/ISRCTN02734162/torpedo-cf (first received 10 October 2011). [CENTRAL: CN-01933136] [CFGD REGISTER: PI299c]
Turner 2013 {published data only}
- Turner R, Biondo LR, Slain D, Phillips U, Cardenas SC, Moffett K. A randomized pilot study of continuous versus intermittent infusion piperacillin-tazobactam for the treatment of pulmonary exacerbations in patients with cystic fibrosis [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 2013;48 Suppl 36:326, Abstract no: 332. [CENTRAL: 980337] [CFGD REGISTER: PI272] [Google Scholar]
Wesley 1988 {unpublished data only}
- Wesley AW, Quested C, Edgar BW, Lennon DR. A double-blind comparison of ceftazidime with tobramycin and ticarcillin in the treatment of exacerbations of pseudomonas chest infection in children with cystic fibrosis [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 10th International Cystic Fibrosis Congress; 1988 March 5-10; Sydney, Australia. (Excerpta Medica, Asia Pacific Congress Series, No. 74). 1988:13.
Whitehead 2002 {published data only}
- Watson A, Whitehead A, Conway SP, Etherington C. Efficacy and safety of once daily tobramycin in treating acute respiratory exacerbations in adult patients [abstract]. Pediatric Pulmonology 1999;28(19):262-3. [CFGD REGISTER: PI149b] [Google Scholar]
- Whitehead A, Conway SP, Etherington C, Caldwell NA, Setchfield N, Bogle S. Once-daily tobramycin in the treatment of adult patients with cystic fibrosis. European Respiratory Journal 2002;19(2):303-9. [CFGD REGISTER: PI149c] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Whitehead A, Conway SP, Etherington C, Dave J. Efficacy and safety of once daily tobramycin in treating acute respiratory exacerbations in adult patients [abstract]. The Netherlands Journal of Medicine 1999;54(Suppl):S36-7. [CFGD REGISTER: PI149a] [Google Scholar]
Additional references
Cantin 1995
- Cantin A. Cystic fibrosis lung inflammation: early, sustained and severe. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 1995;151(4):939-41. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Castellani 2018
- Castellani C, Duff A, Bell SC, Heijerman HG, Munck A, Ratjen F, et al. ECFS best practice guidelines: the 2018 revision. Journal of Cystic Fibrosis 2018;17(2):153-78. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Cheng 1996
- Cheng K, Smyth RL, Govan JR, Doherty C, Winstanley C, Denning N, et al. Spread of beta-lactam-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a cystic fibrosis clinic. Lancet 1996;348(9028):639-42. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Elbourne 2002
- Elbourne DR, Altman DG, Higgins JPT, Curtin F, Worthington HV, Vail A. Meta-analyses involving cross-over trials: methodological issues. International Journal of Epidemiology 2002;31(1):140-9. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Farrell 2018
- Farrell P, Férec C, Macek M, Frischer T, Renner S, Riss K, et al. Estimating the age of p.(Phe508del) with family studies of geographically distinct European populations and the early spread of cystic fibrosis. European Journal of Human Genetics 2018;26(12):1832-9. [DOI: 10.1038/s41431-018-0234-z] [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Flume 2008
- Flume, P A et al and the Clinical Practice Guidelines for Pulmonary Therapies Committee. Cystic Fibrosis Pulmonary Guidelines: Treatment of Pulmonary Exacerbations. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 2008;180(9):802–808. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Gibson 2003
- Gibson RL, Burns JL, Ramsey BW. Pathophysiology and management of pulmonary infections in cystic fibrosis. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 2003;168(8):918-51. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Higgins 2003
- Higgins JP, Thompson SG, Deeks JJ, Altman DG. Measuring inconsistency in meta-analyses. BMJ 2003;327(7414):557-60. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Higgins 2017
- Higgins JP, Altman DG, Sterne JA on behalf of the CSMG and the CBMG , editor(s). Chapter 8: Assessing risk of bias in included studies. In: Higgins JP, Green S, editor(s). Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions. Version 5.2 (updated June 2017). Cochrane, 2017. Available from training.cochrane.org/handbook/archive/v5.2.
Hoiby 1993
- Hoiby N. Antibiotic therapy for chronic infection of pseudomonas in the lung. Annual Review of Medicine 1993;44:1-10. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Katbamna 1998
- Katbamna B, Homnick DN, Marks JH. Contralateral suppression of distortion product otoacoustic emissions in children with cystic fibrosis: effects of tobramycin. Journal of the American Academy of Audiology 1998;9(3):172-8. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Kucers 1997
- Kucers A, Crowe S, Grayson M, Hoy J (editors). The Use of Antibiotics: A Clinical Review of Antibacterial, Antifungal and Antiviral Drugs. 5th edition. Oxford: Hodder Arnold, 1997. [ISBN-10: 0750601558 ] [Google Scholar]
Levy 1998
- Levy SB. Antimicrobial resistance: bacteria on the defence. Resistance stems from misguided efforts to try to sterilise our environment. BMJ 1998;317(7159):612-3. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Mulherin 1991
- Mulherin D, Fahy J, Grant W, Keogan M, Kavanagh B, FitzGerald M. Aminoglycoside induced ototoxicity in patients with cystic fibrosis. Irish Journal of Medical Science 1991;160(6):173-5. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Prayle 2010
- Prayle A, Smyth A. Aminoglycoside use in cystic fibrosis: therapeutic strategies and toxicity. Curr Opin Pulm Med 2010;16(6):604-10. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Saiman 1996
- Saiman L, Mehar F, Niu WW, Neu HC, Shaw KJ, Miller G, Prince A. Antibiotic susceptibility of multiply resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolated from patients with cystic fibrosis, including candidates for transplantation. Clin Infect Dis 1996;23:532-537. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Schulz 1995
- Schulz KF, Chalmers I, Hayes RJ, Altman DG. Empirical Evidence of Bias. JAMA 1995;273(5):408-12. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Schuneman 2006
- Schunemann HJ, Fretheim A, Oxman AD. Improving the use of research evidence in guideline development: 13. Applicability, transferability and adaptation. Health Research Policy & Systems 2006;4:25. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Smith 2003
- Smith AL, Fiel SB, Mayer-Hamblett N, Ramsey B, Burns JL. Susceptibility testing of Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates and clinical response to parenteral antibiotic administration: lack of association in cystic fibrosis. Chest 2003;123(5):1495-502. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Sterne 2017
- Sterne JA, Egger M, Moher D on behalf of the Cochrane Bias Methods Group. Chapter 10. Addressing reporting biases. In: Higgins JP, Green S, editor(s). Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions. Version 5.2 (updated June 2017). Cochrane, 2017. Available from training.cochrane.org/handbook/archive/v5.2.
UK CF Trust 2009
- UK Cystic Fibrosis Trust Antibiotic Working Group. Antibiotic treatment for cystic fibrosis – 3rd edition. www.cysticfibrosis.org.uk/the-work-we-do/resources-for-cf-professionals/consensus-documents (accessed 08 February 2021).
References to other published versions of this review
Elphick 2002
- Elphick HE, Tan A, Ashby D, Smyth RL. Systematic reviews and lifelong diseases. BMJ 2002;325(7360):381-4. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Elphick 2005
- Elphick HE, Tan AA. Single versus combination intravenous antibiotic therapy for people with cystic fibrosis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 2. Art. No: CD002007. [DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD002007.pub2] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Elphick 2014
- Elphick HE, Jahnke N. Single versus combination intravenous antibiotic therapy for people with cystic fibrosis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2014, Issue 4. Art. No: CD002007. [DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD002007.pub3] [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]