Liver Abscess Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of Empirical Ciprofloxacin Plus Metronidazole and Cefixime Plus Metronidazole Therapy for the Treatment of Liver Abscess: A Randomised Controlled Clinical Trial
Liver abscess is purulent collections in the liver parenchyma that result from microbial
infection spread to the liver through the biliary tree, hepatic or portal vein and by
extension of adjacent infection or as a result of trauma. Liver abscesses are most commonly
pyogenic followed by amoebic and rarely tuberculous or fungal in immunocompromised patients.
In the developing country amoebic liver abscess is more frequent than the developed country
but secondary bacterial infection of amoebic liver abscess and polymicrobial pyogenic liver
abscess are also common.
Pyogenic liver abscess is commonly a polymicrobial infection caused by mixed enteric
facultative and anaerobic pathogens. The most commonly isolated organisms are Escherichia
coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Streptococcus constellatus, Streptococcus anginosus,
Streptococcus intermedius, Enterococcus and anaerobes, including Bacteroidesfragilis and
Fusobacteriumnecrophorum. Amoebic liver abscess most frequently occur following infection
with the parasite Entamoeba histolytica.
Liver abscess is a common medical emergency. Prompt empirical antimicrobial with or without
percutaneous aspiration or drainage of the abscess is therapeutic.
An empiric antimicrobial regimen for liver abscess should cover enteric gram-negative
bacilli, streptococci, anaerobes and antamoebahistolytica. Presently a Fluoroquinolone
(Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin) or a Third or Fourth generation Cefalosporine (Cefixime,
Ceftriaxone, cefepime) or a Beta-lactam-beta-lactamase inhibitor combination
(piperacillin-tazobactam or ticarcillin-clavulanate) or a Carbapenem (Imipenem-cilastatin,
Meropenem, Doripenem, Ertapenem) are being used in combination with or without Metronidazole
as the empirical antimicrobial regime for the treatment live abscess. There is no randomized
controlled clinical trial to evaluated and compare efficacy of the antimicrobial regimens for
the treatment of liver abscess as well as there is no specific treatment guideline for the
use of empirical antibiotics. There is also no definite proven rational for using
Cefalosporine, Beta-lactam-beta-lactamase inhibitor combination or Carbapenem upfront, not
using Fluoroquinolone in empirical antibiotic regimen for the treatment of liver abscess.
Injudicious use of broader spectrum antibiotics may also lead to rise in antibiotic
resistance in future.
Both ciprofloxacin and Cefixime are effective oral antibiotics as they are well-absorbed
orally with good oral bioavailability and achieve plasma concentration well above the minimal
inhibitory concentrations require for the killing of the microorganism. Using intravenous
(IV) antibiotics upfront, for the treatment of liver abscess in patients who can take orally
may unnecessary increase the duration of hospital stay, healthcare burden and the cost of
therapy, as well as the risk of hospital acquired infection.
So the investigators have planned this randomized controlled double blind study to evaluate
the efficacy of empirical Ciprofloxacin plus Metronidazole and Cefixime plus Metronidazole
therapy for the treatment of liver abscess and to compare the outcomes of two different
empirical antibiotics regimen.
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