The purpose of this study was to evaluate the incidence of AKI when critically ill patients were administered PT compared to cefepime or meropenem (control group). In this study, there was no statistically significant difference in the primary endpoint of AKI between the PT group and the control group.
Several studies have shown that combining PT and vancomycin leads to an increased risk of AKI, compared to the combinations of other β-lactams with vancomycin [7,8,9,10]. Multiple meta-analyses have confirmed this association among adult and pediatric patients [11,12,13,14,15]. This finding has been specifically demonstrated among critically ill patients who have a higher baseline risk of AKI [10, 12].
The mechanism of increased nephrotoxicity with this combination is still not well understood. It might be thought that the increased risk is due to the nephrotoxicity of vancomycin. However, this assumption is not supported because vancomycin was a common factor when comparing PT plus vancomycin to other β-lactams plus vancomycin and the risk of AKI was higher with the combination of PT plus vancomycin compared to vancomycin alone [12, 14, 15]. There are two other possible explanations: either PT has an independent nephrotoxic effect or it has a synergistic effect on vancomycin-associated nephrotoxicity. Piperacillin has been shown to have a higher affinity for the renal organic anion transporter (OAT) compared to another penicillin drug, flucloxacillin [20]. Additionally, a previous case report identified interstitial nephritis as a mechanism of PT-associated AKI [21]. However, PT has not been previously considered a nephrotoxic drug [12].
Limited studies assessed the effect of PT monotherapy on renal function. Karino et al. compared PT to biapenem for the treatment of healthcare-associated pneumonia among elderly patients, observing nephrotoxicity in six patients (11.3%) in the PT group and no patients in the biapenem group (P = 0.005) [22]. This study included only elderly patients and PT was compared with biapenem only, which is neither approved in the United States nor in Europe, which limits its external validity to other β-lactams. Additionally, the authors did not discuss the use of other nephrotoxic agents or antibiotics that might have contributed to the increased incidence of AKI, nor did they state how they defined nephrotoxicity. Finally, the baseline characteristics of patients did not include baseline kidney function, history of chronic kidney disease, or admission to ICU.
Another study by Jensen et al. evaluated the incidence of kidney failure with broad-spectrum antibiotics, finding that treatment with PT lasting longer than three days was associated with more incidence of estimated glomerular filtration rate of less than 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 on day 7 compared to shorter duration of use [17]. Jensen et al. also observed an increase in the rate of renal recovery after the discontinuation of PT. This study examined only the effect of PT on the recovery of renal function but did not directly examine the effect of PT on the incidence of AKI. Also, patients on vancomycin were not excluded and the analysis was not adjusted for the use of vancomycin or aminoglycosides, which might have led to a slower recovery if they were used concomitantly with PT. Finally, this finding about PT was detected from a secondary analysis which makes it exploratory and needs to be confirmed in further studies.
Recently, Hall et al. found that PT is not an independent risk factor for AKI among patients with Gram-negative bacteremia. However, only one-fifth of the patients were admitted to the ICU which limits the generalizability of the study conclusion to critically ill patients [23]. Another smaller study conducted in Japan showed that PT monotherapy is associated with a higher incidence of AKI compared to cefepime, among critically ill adult patients [19]. In this latter study, only one patient in the cefepime group had AKI and none of the patients in both groups required renal replacement therapy. These findings may reflect the low severity index of the studied cohort, particularly that critical illness severity scores, e.g., APACHE or Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) were not reported. This limits the generalizability of these findings to other critically ill cohorts who are generally at a higher risk of AKI. Lastly, a study by Joyce et al. found that PT is an independent risk factor for AKI among critically ill children, compared to cefepime [18]. However, this study included only pediatric patients and did not demonstrate the increased risk of AKI with the combination of PT plus vancomycin which was previously reported among adults. Thus, it is not known whether age plays a role in determining this association.
In the present study, we aimed to assess the renal safety of PT, without vancomycin, in comparison to other commonly used β-lactams among critically ill patients so we excluded patients who received concomitant vancomycin. To avoid the limitations of previous studies, the present study included only critically ill patients, was not restricted to elderly patients, and was adjusted for the concomitant use of nephrotoxic medications in the analysis.
Major surgery is an independent risk factor of AKI [24]. In our study, the PT group had more postoperative patients than the control group, which may reflect a higher risk of AKI among patients in the PT group. However, we repeated our primary analysis and included postoperative status as well as other baseline imbalances in the regression model and did not find a significant difference between the two groups in the odds of AKI.
We found that the length of hospital and ICU stays were longer in the control group. This finding might reflect the pattern of use of these antimicrobials in our facility rather than being an outcome of therapy since we could not calculate the length of stay from the start of therapy, but rather, we analyzed the total length of stay, including the duration before the start of therapy. In our facility, PT is used as the first-line antibiotic when coverage for pseudomonas is indicated, so it is used early in the hospital course. On the other hand, cefepime and meropenem are used mostly for patients who have previous microbiological data showing a pathogen sensitive to either one of them, which is more common among patients with a prolonged hospital stay.
In the present study, the need for renal replacement therapy was higher in the control group (5.6%) than in the PT group (2.2%; P = 0.03). This finding might have been caused by the difference in pre-treatment renal function (Table 1). Although we adjusted the analysis of AKI for potential confounders, the number of events in the secondary outcomes, including the need for renal replacement therapy, was not enough to adjust for all potential confounders. Thus, this finding needs to be explored in larger studies.
Due to the structural similarity between teicoplanin and vancomycin and the potential of teicoplanin to cause AKI, we conducted an additional analysis that excluded patients who received teicoplanin concomitantly and found a significantly higher incidence of AKI among patients treated with PT, compared to the control group. This finding, along with the shorter time to AKI among PT group, might indicate a modest association between the use of PT and AKI and warrants larger studies to investigate the renal safety of PT. We suggest that future studies use survival analysis, which might be superior for exploring the difference in the time to AKI.
Limitations of this study include the retrospective design, the relatively small sample size, and the imbalanced number of patients in the study groups (507 patients in the PT group and 162 in the control group). However, this distribution reflects the local pattern of antimicrobial use in our facility, as mentioned earlier. The patients included in this study had low median APACHE II scores at the baseline. However, these scores correlate with the observed mortality. Although most of the baseline characteristics were balanced or adjusted for in the final analysis, there might be some unobserved confounding factors that impacted the results. For example, the source of infection could not be identified from the admission notes for one-third of patients, which precluded its inclusion in the endpoint analysis. Furthermore, we did not assess urine outputs, which may have affected the rate of AKI, especially among elderly patients and patients with low body mass.