Localized administration of colistin reduces the incidence of systemic adverse events in patients with lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), a recent study has shown.
“Current literature supports efficacy of nebulized colistin as adjunctive treatment for LRTI,” the authors said. “However, there is a paucity of data surrounding safety of this administration technique.”
In this study, the authors accessed electronic medical records (EMR) to identify patients treated with nebulized colistin between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2018.
The following data were obtained from the EMR as well as hospital adverse drug reaction (ADR) reporting systems: demographics, dose, serum creatinine, concomitant nephrotoxins, infecting pathogen, treatment-emergent ADRs, and drug toxicities. The prevalence of renal, neurologic, or respiratory ADRs secondary to nebulized colistin was the primary outcome.
Thirty-two patients were administered nebulized colistin in this analysis, of whom about 18 percent had baseline chronic kidney disease. Twenty-nine patients had cultures that turned out positive, of which 11 organisms were resistant to all tested antimicrobial agents.
In addition, three patients had acute kidney injury, one suffered a neurologic reaction, and another developed a respiratory reaction. However, none of these incidents were found to be related to treatment.
These findings suggest that nebulized colistin is a safe adjunct in the management of LRTI.
“Systemic colistin is often utilized for management of drug-resistant LRTI,” the authors said. “Nebulized administration of colistin allows direct instillation of active agent to maximize concentrations and limit systemic toxicities.”