Efficacy and Safety of Oral Fosfomycin-Trometamol in Male Urinary Tract Infections with Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacterales
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Material and Method
2.1. Study Design and Participants
2.2. Definitions
- −
- The presence of at least one of these symptoms: fever > 38 °C and/or genitourinary symptoms (i.e, suprapubic pain or tenderness, and/or dysuria, and/or urinary frequency, and/or urinary burns, and/or macroscopic haematuria, and/or acute urine retention, and/or pain on the digital rectal examination, and/or confusion).
- −
- And a routine urine culture with leukocyturia > 10/mm³ and bacteriuria > 10³ CFU/mL.
- −
- Chronic bacterial prostatitis (CBP) was defined by the above criteria combined with:
- −
- Clinical signs lasting more than 3 months.
- −
- And/or a history of UTI with the same strain with the same Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (AST) in the last three months.
- −
- Recurrence of UTI, defined as UTI with the same Enterobacterales strain with the same AST, within six months follow-up.
- −
- A new UTI, defined by an UTI to another type of Enterobacterales strain or the same type of Enterobacterales strain but with a different AST (except for fosfomycin resistance).
- −
- Microbiological recovery, defined by a sterile urine culture under treatment and/or within one month after treatment.
- −
- The safety of FT administration. Adverse events (AEs) were classified as serious (requiring hospitalization), severe (requiring discontinuation of oral FT), moderate (requiring symptomatic treatment), and minor (requiring no specific management).
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethics Statement Characteristics
3. Results
3.1. Patient Characteristics
3.2. Acute Male UTI
3.3. Chronic Bacterial Prostatitis
3.4. Fosfomycin-Trometamol Safety
4. Discussion
4.1. Patient Characteristics
4.2. Acute Male UTI
- the lack of data, in particular the absence of a randomized trial against a reference molecule with good prostatic diffusion such as FQ,
- the need for a usually lengthy treatment (≥2 weeks) in male UTIs in the absence of criteria to exclude prostatic damage [1],
- the pharmacokinetics of oral FT in prostate tissue with a concentration rate > MIC (example taken at 4 mg/L) of 80–100% for the first 12 h but <20% at 24 h (modelling concerning the transition zone of the prostate, concentrations even lower for the peripheral zone) [36],
- good safety for the 3 g/24 h dosage.
4.3. Chronic Bacterial Prostatitis
4.4. Fosfomycin-Trometamol Safety
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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UTI | Patient/UTI Episodes | Age | Charlson Comorbidity Index/Immunosuppression | Urological Disorder/Creatinine * (umol/liter) | Clinical Features | CRP (mg/L)/Acute Kidney Failure | Bacteriuria/ ATS/ Fosfomycin MIC | Preliminary Antibiotics | Oral FT (Dosing, Duration) | Recovery (Clinical/ Microbiological) | Follow-Up ** (Recurrence/ITU New Episode) | Adverse Effects | Microbiological Colonization |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Acute UTI | 1 | 61 | 2/No | BPH***/88 | Fever UFD | NR/83 | E. coli 107/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | FQ (2days) | 3 g/24 h, 1 w | Yes/ND | 0/0 | Minor diarrhea | ND |
2 | 76 | 9/No | Non/56 | Fever UFD, lower back pain | 300/28 | E. coli 106/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | NTF (1day) | 3 g/24 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | No | No | |
3 | 69 | 3/No | BPH/73 | Fever UFD | 160/60 | E. coli 107/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | FQ (2days) AMC (2days) | 3 g/24 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | No | No | |
4 | 38 | 0/No | Non/90 | UFD | <5/88 | K. pneumoniae 105/penicillinase, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/24 | SMX-TMP (5days) | 3 g/24 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | Minor diarrhea | No | |
Chronic bacterial prostatitis | 5 | 69 | 2/No | BPH, prostatic calcifications/86 | UFD | 170/74 | E. coli 105/penicillinase, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | SMX-TMP (10days) | 3 g/24 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | Moderate diarrhea | No |
6/1st UTI | 79 | 5/No | Prostatic adenocarcinoma/65 | UFD | NR | E. coli 106/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 2 (M1, M3)/0 | Non | No | |
6/2nd UTI | UFD | NR | E. coli 106/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | Minor diarrhea | No | ||||
7 | 83 | 10/No | Prostatic adenocarcinoma/47 | UFD | NR | E. coli 106/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w | Yes/ND | 0/0 | Non | No | |
8 | 68 | 10/No | BPH, prostatic calcifications/69 | Fever UFD | NR | E. coli 107/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 2 w 3 g/48 h, 4 w | Yes/Yes | 1 (M2)/0 | Non | No | |
9 | 76 | 7/Renal transplantation | Vesicoureteral reflux, HBP/36 | UFD | 20/33 | K. pneumoniae 105/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/96 | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | No/No | 2 (W1, M3)/2 (M1, M2) | Non | No | |
10 | 67 | 7/Cirrhosis | BPH, bladder disorders/95 | UFD | 40/104 | K. pneumoniae 107/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/32 | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 2 (M1, M4)/0 | Non | Yes, (W1, MIC 16mg/L) | |
11 | 53 | 2/Systemic Lupus Erythematosus | BPH/102 | UFD | <5/102 | E. coli 106/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | Minor diarrhea | Non | |
12/1st UTI | 75 | 3/No | BPH/71 | Fever UFD | <5/63 | E. coli 105/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | NTF (21days) | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 1 (W2)/0 | Non | Non | |
12/2nd UTI | UFD | NR | E. coli 105/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | Non | Non | ||||
13 | 45 | 3/No | Bladder disorders/105 | Fever UFD | 10/73 | E. coli 106/penicillinase, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | SMX-TMP (7 days) | 3 g/24 h, 3 w | Yes/ND | 0/1 (M4) | Non | Non | |
14 | 59 | 3/No | BPH, testicular implant/97 | Fever UFD | NR/95 | E. coli 105/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/ND | 0/2 (M2, M3) | Moderate diarrhea | Non | |
15/1st UTI | 71 | 3/No | BPH/79 | Fever UFD | <5/81 | E. coli 106/FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 2 w 3 g/48 h, 4 w | Yes/ND | 1 (M6)/0 | No | ND | |
15/2nd UTI | Fever | NR | E. coli 106/FQ R, SMX-TMP R/2 | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 9 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | No | Yes (M3) | ||||
16/1st UTI | 69 | 6/Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, pulmonary transplantation | Urinary bladder carcinoma, bladder disorders/55 | UFD | 20/46 | K. pneumoniae 107/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | NTF (10 days) | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/ND | 1 (M6)/0 | No | NR | |
16/2nd UTI | UFD | NR | K. pneumoniae 103/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 3 w 3 g/48 h, 3 w | Yes/Yes | 1 (M3)/0 | No | Non | ||||
16/3rd UTI | UFD | NR | K. pneumoniae 105/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R/ND | No | 3 g/24 h, 1 w 3 g/48 h, 2 w | Yes/Yes | 0/0 | No | Non |
UTI | Reference | Number/Number of Patients /Sex | Age | Comorbidities * | Clinical Features | Urine Culture/ATS | Fosfomycin MIC | Oral FT (Dosing) | Oral FT (Duration) | Microbiological Recovery | Clinical Recovery | Recurrence | Adverse Effects |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Acute UTI | Our study | 4/M | 61 | 50% BPH, 25% CKD | Fever UFD | 75% E. coli, 25% K. pneumoniae/75% ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R | 24 (1/4) | 3 g/24 h | 2.5 w | 100% (4/4) | 100% (4/4) | 0% (0/4) (follow-up 5.3 M) | Diarrhea (2/4) |
Da Silva, 2015 [19] | N°1/M | 70 | No | UFD | K. pneumoniae/PCE, FQ R | 128 | 6 g/24 h | 1 w | Yes | Yes | ND | No | |
N°2/M | 80 | CKD | ND | K. pneumoniae/CPE, FQ R | 8 | 6 g/24 h | 1 w | Yes | Yes | ND | No | ||
Neuner, 2012 [26] | 19/M | NR | 46% CKD 10% UT, 12% UD, 51% IS | UFD | Enterobacterale, E. faecium, P. aeruginosa/MDR | ND | 2, 9 +/−1, 8 doses | 58% (11/19) | ND | ND | ND | ||
Qiao, 2013 [27] | 105/M | NR | No | ND | NR | ND | 3 g/48 h | 5D (D1, D3, D5) | ND | 77/105 (73%, w2) | ND | Diarrhea (5%) | |
Pullukcu, 2007 [28] | 52/27 F (52%) | 55 +/−18 | 10% UT, 8% bladder carcinoma, 10% IS | UFD | E. coli/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R | ND | 3 g/24 h | 3D | 79% (41/52) | 94% (49/52) | 11% (3/28) (follow-up 1 M) | No | |
Senol, 2010 [29] | 27/14 F (52%) | 58 +/−15 | 19% CKD, 46% UT, 26% UD, 17% bladder carcinoma, 5% IS | UFD | E. coli/ESBL, FQ R, SMX-TMP R | ND | 3 g/24 h | 3D | 59% (16/27) | 78% (21/27) | 6% (1/16) (follow-up 1 M) | No | |
Veve, 2016 [30] | 89/66 F (74%) | 69 +/−18 | 42% CKD, 9% IS, 38% UT | ND | 84% E. coli, 15% Klebsiella sp./BLSE, 95% FQ R, 80% SMX-TMP R | ND | 62% 3 g/72 h 23% 3 g/48 h 13% 3 g/24 h | 9D 6D 4.5D | 13/89 patients consulted again within 30 days; 44% for clinical failure, 24% for recurrence, 8% for treatment adverse effects | ||||
Nagel, 2015 [31] | 43/35 F (81%) | 63 | Creatinine mean (umol/liter): 58 mL/min | UFD | 25% Enterobacterales(16% EBLSE), 70% Enterococcus sp. (45% VRE), 5% others | ND | 81% 3 g (1 dose) 19% 3 g/48 h | 81% (1 dose) 19% 6D | 95% (41/43) | ND | ND | NR | |
Chronic bacterial prostatitis | Our study | 12/M | 68 | 100% UD (67% BPH), 25% bladder carcinoma, 33% IS, 25% CKD | Fever (35%) UFD | 71% E. coli, 29% K. pneumoniae/76% ESBL, 100% FQ R and SMX-TMP R | 43 (3/17) | 3 g/24-48 h | 5.5 w | 92% (11/12) | 92% (11/12) | 58% (7/12) (follow-up 5.8 M) | Diarrhea (25%, 3/12) |
Grayson, 2015 [18] | N°1/M | 73 | No | Fever UFD | E. coli/ESBL, FQ R | 1 | 3 g/24 h, (6 g/24 h, 5D) | 16 w | Yes | Yes | No (follow-up 6 M) | Diarrhea (6 g/24 h) | |
N°2/M | 80 | No | UFD | E. coli/ESBL, FQ R | 1 | 3 g/24 h | 12 w | Yes | Yes | No (follow-up 6 M) | No | ||
Cunha, 2015 [32] | 1/M (ITU 1) | 53 | BPH, prostatic calcifications | UFD | E. coli/ESBL, FQ R | 2 | 3 g/72 h | 4 w | ND | Yes | Yes (W1) | No | |
1/M (ITU 2) | UFD | E. coli/ESBL, FQ R | ND | 6 g/72 h | 4 w | ND | Yes | Yes (W1) | NR | ||||
1/M (ITU 3) | UFD | E. coli/ESBL, FQ R | 2 | 3 g/72 h 2S + doxy + surgery | Yes | Yes | ND | NR | |||||
Karaikos, 2015 [33] | 20/M | 54 | 40% CKD | UFD | E. coli (13), K. oxytoca (3), others (4)/79% FQ R, 60% SMX-TMP R | 32(median) | 3 g/24 h 1S, puis 3 g/48 h | 6 w | ND | 85% (17/20) | ND | Diarrhea (25%) | |
Los-Arcos, 2016 [16] | 15/M | 54 | 7% CKD | UFD | E. coli (14), K. oxytoca (1)/26% BLSE, 66% FQ R, 33% SMX-TMP R | ND | 77% 3 g/72 h 13% 3 g/48 h | 6 w | ND | 93% (14/15) | 53% (8/15) à M20 | No | |
Gian, 2016 [34] | 1/M | 53 | BPH, prostatic calcifications | UFD | Raoultella planticola | ND | 3 g/48 h | 12 w | Yes | Yes | ND | NR | |
Matthews, 2016 [35] | 4/M | 79 | 1 Prostatic adenocarcinoma 1 CKD | ND | E. coli/ESBL | ND | 50 doses | ND | 4/4 (100%) | 2/4 (50%) | No |
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Bouiller, K.; Zayet, S.; Lalloz, P.-E.; Potron, A.; Gendrin, V.; Chirouze, C.; Klopfenstein, T. Efficacy and Safety of Oral Fosfomycin-Trometamol in Male Urinary Tract Infections with Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacterales. Antibiotics 2022, 11, 198. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11020198
Bouiller K, Zayet S, Lalloz P-E, Potron A, Gendrin V, Chirouze C, Klopfenstein T. Efficacy and Safety of Oral Fosfomycin-Trometamol in Male Urinary Tract Infections with Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacterales. Antibiotics. 2022; 11(2):198. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11020198
Chicago/Turabian StyleBouiller, Kévin, Souheil Zayet, Paul-Emile Lalloz, Anaïs Potron, Vincent Gendrin, Catherine Chirouze, and Timothée Klopfenstein. 2022. "Efficacy and Safety of Oral Fosfomycin-Trometamol in Male Urinary Tract Infections with Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacterales" Antibiotics 11, no. 2: 198. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11020198
APA StyleBouiller, K., Zayet, S., Lalloz, P. -E., Potron, A., Gendrin, V., Chirouze, C., & Klopfenstein, T. (2022). Efficacy and Safety of Oral Fosfomycin-Trometamol in Male Urinary Tract Infections with Multidrug-Resistant Enterobacterales. Antibiotics, 11(2), 198. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11020198