Preventive antibacterial therapy in acute ischemic stroke: a randomized controlled trial |
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Authors: | Harms Hendrik Prass Konstantin Meisel Christian Klehmet Juliane Rogge Witold Drenckhahn Christoph Göhler Jos Bereswill Stefan Göbel Ulf Wernecke Klaus Dieter Wolf Tilo Arnold Guy Halle Elke Volk Hans-Dieter Dirnagl Ulrich Meisel Andreas |
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Institution: | Department of Neurology, Charité Universitaetsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany. |
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Abstract: | BackgroundPneumonia is a major risk factor of death after acute stroke. In a mouse model, preventive antibacterial therapy with moxifloxacin not only prevents the development of post-stroke infections, it also reduces mortality, and improves neurological outcome significantly. In this study we investigate whether this approach is effective in stroke patients.MethodsPreventive ANtibacterial THERapy in acute Ischemic Stroke (PANTHERIS) is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in 80 patients with severe, non-lacunar, ischemic stroke (NIHSS>11) in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory. Patients received either intravenous moxifloxacin (400 mg daily) or placebo for 5 days starting within 36 hours after stroke onset. Primary endpoint was infection within 11 days. Secondary endpoints included neurological outcome, survival, development of stroke-induced immunodepression, and induction of bacterial resistance.FindingsOn intention-to treat analysis (79 patients), the infection rate at day 11 in the moxifloxacin treated group was 15.4% compared to 32.5% in the placebo treated group (p?=?0.114). On per protocol analysis (n?=?66), moxifloxacin significantly reduced infection rate from 41.9% to 17.1% (p?=?0.032). Stroke associated infections were associated with a lower survival rate. In this study, neurological outcome and survival were not significantly influenced by treatment with moxifloxacin. Frequency of fluoroquinolone resistance in both treatment groups did not differ. On logistic regression analysis, treatment arm as well as the interaction between treatment arm and monocytic HLA-DR expression (a marker for immunodepression) at day 1 after stroke onset was independently and highly predictive for post-stroke infections.InterpretationPANTHERIS suggests that preventive administration of moxifloxacin is superior in reducing infections after severe non-lacunar ischemic stroke compared to placebo. In addition, the results emphasize the pivotal role of immunodepression in developing post-stroke infections.Trial RegistrationControlled-Trials.com ISRCTN74386719 |
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