P-1327. Clinical Outcomes In Patients Who Receive Ertapenem Vs. Meropenem For Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (ESBL) Infections And Have Hypoalbuminemia
Kendall Ferrara, Melissa George, Josh Rumph

TL;DR
This study compares ertapenem and meropenem for treating ESBL infections in hypoalbuminemic patients and finds no significant difference in treatment failure.
Contribution
It provides clinical evidence on the effectiveness of ertapenem versus meropenem in hypoalbuminemic patients with ESBL infections.
Findings
No significant difference in treatment failure between ertapenem and meropenem.
Baseline characteristics were similar between the two groups.
Larger, randomized studies are needed to confirm these findings.
Abstract
The standard of care for treatment of ESBL infections is a carbapenem. Ertapenem is highly protein bound. In patients that are hypoalbuminemic and/or critically ill, this leads to an increased free fraction of ertapenem and a significantly decreased half-life. Limited clinical data has shown a significantly increased risk of mortality, readmission, and length of stay in patients who are hypoalbuminemic and receive ertapenem compared to other carbapenems for ESBL infections. Based on this data, the Infectious Diseases Society of America suggests utilizing meropenem or imipenem-cilastatin in patients that are critically ill and/or hypoalbuminemic with ESBL infections outside of the urinary tract. Historically at East Carolina University Health, ertapenem has been more commonly used than meropenem for ESBL infections regardless of clinical status or albumin. This study aims to evaluate the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntibiotics Pharmacokinetics and Efficacy · Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria · Urinary Tract Infections Management
