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Clinical Sciences |
Renal Unit, Department of Medicine & Geriatrics, Kwong Wah Hospital, Hong Kong SAR, China
Correspondence to: P.N. Wong, Renal Unit, Department of Medicine & Geriatrics, Kwong Wah Hospital, 25 Waterloo Road, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR, China. apnwong{at}alumni.cuhk.net
Objective: Fungal peritonitis (FP) is a serious
complication of continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD), being
associated with significant morbidity and mortality. The role of nystatin
prophylaxis during antibiotic therapy in the prevention of FP remains
controversial, especially in programs with a modest or low baseline FP rate.
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effect of nystatin
prophylaxis on the occurrence of FP in programs with a relatively modest
baseline FP rate.
Patients and Methods: Incident and prevalent patients
receiving CAPD between April 1995 and April 2005 at our center were included
and divided into 2 groups. The control group included 320 patients (total
follow-up 8875 patient-months) being treated without nystatin before October
1999; the nystatin group included 481 patients (total follow-up 13725
patient-months) being treated after October 1999. Nystatin tablets (500000
units, 4 times per day) were given orally during whatever use of antibiotics
to cover the whole course of antibiotic therapy. Occurrence of FP and
antibiotic-related FP (AR-FP) in patients with and without nystatin
prophylaxis was compared.
Results: The two groups were of similar age but the
nystatin group had a significantly higher percentage of diabetics. In
addition, the nystatin group had a higher proportion of patients using
disconnecting twin-bag exchange systems and had a significantly lower
peritonitis rate compared with the control. There were 13 and 14 episodes of
FP in the nystatin and control groups respectively. The fungal peritonitis
rate of the nystatin group was slightly lower than that of the control group
(0.011 vs 0.019 per patient-year) but it did not reach statistical
significance. There was, however, a significant decrease in the incidence and
proportion of AR-FP in the nystatin group compared with the control group,
which persisted even after adjustment for the peritonitis rate.
Kaplan–Meier analysis further demonstrated significantly better
AR-FP-free survival in the nystatin group compared with the control group. No
significant side effects were observed for nystatin. Subgroup analyses in
patients of the 2 different connecting systems revealed a similar but
nonsignificant trend toward reduction of AR-FP in patients given nystatin
prophylaxis.
Conclusion: Oral nystatin prophylaxis might prevent the
occurrence of AR-FP in CAPD patients, resulting in a trend toward reduction in
the incidence of FP even in programs with a modest baseline FP rate. A large
scale, prospective, randomized controlled trial is needed to further examine
this issue.
KEY WORDS: Fungal peritonitis; prophylaxis; nystatin; antibiotics.
Received 5 January 2007; accepted 24 April 2007.
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