Douwe F. Postma
Utrecht University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Douwe F. Postma.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015
Douwe F. Postma; Cornelis H. van Werkhoven; Leontine J. R. van Elden; Steven Thijsen; Andy I. M. Hoepelman; Jan Kluytmans; Wim G. Boersma; Clara J. Compaijen; Eva van der Wall; Jan M. Prins; Jan Jelrik Oosterheert; Marc J.M. Bonten
BACKGROUND The choice of empirical antibiotic treatment for patients with clinically suspected community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) who are admitted to non-intensive care unit (ICU) hospital wards is complicated by the limited availability of evidence. We compared strategies of empirical treatment (allowing deviations for medical reasons) with beta-lactam monotherapy, beta-lactam-macrolide combination therapy, or fluoroquinolone monotherapy. METHODS In a cluster-randomized, crossover trial with strategies rotated in 4-month periods, we tested the noninferiority of the beta-lactam strategy to the beta-lactam-macrolide and fluoroquinolone strategies with respect to 90-day mortality, in an intention-to-treat analysis, using a noninferiority margin of 3 percentage points and a two-sided 90% confidence interval. RESULTS A total of 656 patients were included during the beta-lactam strategy periods, 739 during the beta-lactam-macrolide strategy periods, and 888 during the fluoroquinolone strategy periods, with rates of adherence to the strategy of 93.0%, 88.0%, and 92.7%, respectively. The median age of the patients was 70 years. The crude 90-day mortality was 9.0% (59 patients), 11.1% (82 patients), and 8.8% (78 patients), respectively, during these strategy periods. In the intention-to-treat analysis, the risk of death was higher by 1.9 percentage points (90% confidence interval [CI], -0.6 to 4.4) with the beta-lactam-macrolide strategy than with the beta-lactam strategy and lower by 0.6 percentage points (90% CI, -2.8 to 1.9) with the fluoroquinolone strategy than with the beta-lactam strategy. These results indicated noninferiority of the beta-lactam strategy. The median length of hospital stay was 6 days for all strategies, and the median time to starting oral treatment was 3 days (interquartile range, 0 to 4) with the fluoroquinolone strategy and 4 days (interquartile range, 3 to 5) with the other strategies. CONCLUSIONS Among patients with clinically suspected CAP admitted to non-ICU wards, a strategy of preferred empirical treatment with beta-lactam monotherapy was noninferior to strategies with a beta-lactam-macrolide combination or fluoroquinolone monotherapy with regard to 90-day mortality. (Funded by the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development; CAP-START ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01660204.).
European Respiratory Journal | 2015
Marie-Josée J. Mangen; Mark H. Rozenbaum; Susanne M. Huijts; Cornelis H. van Werkhoven; Douwe F. Postma; Mark Atwood; Anna M.M. Van Deursen; Arie van der Ende; Diederick E. Grobbee; Elisabeth A. M. Sanders; Reiko Sato; Theo Verheij; Conrad E Vissink; Marc J.M. Bonten; G. Ardine de Wit
The Community-Acquired Pneumonia Immunization Trial in Adults (CAPiTA) demonstrated the efficacy of 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) in preventing vaccine-type community-acquired pneumonia and vaccine-type invasive pneumococcal disease in elderly subjects. We examined the cost-effectiveness of PCV13 vaccination in the Netherlands. Using a Markov-type model, incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER) of PCV13 vaccination in different age- and risk-groups for pneumococcal disease were evaluated using a societal perspective. Estimates of quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), costs, vaccine efficacy and epidemiological data were based on the CAPiTA study and other prospective studies. The base-case was PCV13 vaccination of adults aged 65–74 years compared to no vaccination, assuming no net indirect effects in base-case due to paediatric 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine use. Analyses for age- and risk-group specific vaccination strategies and for different levels of hypothetical herd effects from a paediatric PCV programme were also conducted. The ICER for base-case was €8650 per QALY (95% CI 5750–17 100). Vaccination of high-risk individuals aged 65–74 years was cost-saving and extension to medium-risk individuals aged 65–74 years yielded an ICER of €2900. Further extension to include medium- and high-risk individuals aged ≥18 years yielded an ICER of €3100. PCV13 vaccination is highly cost-effective in the Netherlands. The transferability of our results to other countries depends upon vaccination strategies already implemented in those countries. Vaccinating the elderly with 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine is highly cost-effective http://ow.ly/NVeui
Journal of Infection | 2013
Darren P.R. Troeman; Douwe F. Postma; C.H. van Werkhoven; Jan Jelrik Oosterheert
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the potential immunomodulatory effects of statins in community-acquired pneumonia. METHODS We performed a systematic review of available literature on experimental and clinical studies. We used a PubMed/MEDLINE and EMBASE search to identify potential articles. RESULTS We identified 34 original studies, 17 experimental and 17 clinical studies, published up to March 2013. CONCLUSIONS Statins attenuated pulmonary inflammation by modulating neutrophil function, by reducing cytokine expression and release, and by protecting against disruption of pulmonary integrity. However, additional experimental studies are needed to fully elucidate the exact mechanisms. Several clinical studies suggested a decreased risk of CAP or a reduction in mortality due to CAP for current statin users, but the mostly observational design of these studies hampers the interpretation of their results. Therefore, appropriately designed studies, such as randomised controlled trials, are required to demonstrate the usefulness of statins in the prevention and treatment of CAP.
Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2015
C.H. van Werkhoven; J. van der Tempel; R. Jajou; Steven Thijsen; R.J.A. Diepersloot; Marc J.M. Bonten; Douwe F. Postma; Jan Jelrik Oosterheert
To develop and validate a prediction model for Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) in hospitalized patients treated with systemic antibiotics, we performed a case-cohort study in a tertiary (derivation) and secondary care hospital (validation). Cases had a positive Clostridium test and were treated with systemic antibiotics before suspicion of CDI. Controls were randomly selected from hospitalized patients treated with systemic antibiotics. Potential predictors were selected from the literature. Logistic regression was used to derive the model. Discrimination and calibration of the model were tested in internal and external validation. A total of 180 cases and 330 controls were included for derivation. Age >65 years, recent hospitalization, CDI history, malignancy, chronic renal failure, use of immunosuppressants, receipt of antibiotics before admission, nonsurgical admission, admission to the intensive care unit, gastric tube feeding, treatment with cephalosporins and presence of an underlying infection were independent predictors of CDI. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the model in the derivation cohort was 0.84 (95% confidence interval 0.80-0.87), and was reduced to 0.81 after internal validation. In external validation, consisting of 97 cases and 417 controls, the model area under the curve was 0.81 (95% confidence interval 0.77-0.85) and model calibration was adequate (Brier score 0.004). A simplified risk score was derived. Using a cutoff of 7 points, the positive predictive value, sensitivity and specificity were 1.0%, 72% and 73%, respectively. In conclusion, a risk prediction model was developed and validated, with good discrimination and calibration, that can be used to target preventive interventions in patients with increased risk of CDI.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Cornelis H. van Werkhoven; Susanne M. Huijts; Douwe F. Postma; Jan Jelrik Oosterheert; Marc J.M. Bonten
Introduction The diagnostic yield of blood cultures is limited in patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Yet, positive blood culture results provide important information for antibiotic treatment and for monitoring epidemiologic trends. We investigated the potential of clinical predictors to improve the cost-benefit ratio of obtaining blood cultures. Methods Data from two prospective cohort studies of adults with suspected CAP, admitted to non-ICU wards, were combined. Two models were created, one using readily available parameters and one additionally including laboratory parameters. Results 3,786 patients were included (2,626 (69%) with X-ray confirmed CAP). Blood cultures were obtained from 2,977 (79%) patients (and from 2,107 (80%) with X-ray confirmed CAP). 266 (8.9%) of the patients with a blood culture had bacteraemia. Clinical predictors of bacteraemia were absence of pre-admission antibiotic treatment, pleuritic pain, gastro-intestinal symptoms, tachycardia, tachypnea, hypotension and absence of hypoxia. After including laboratory results in the model, younger age, C-reactive protein, leukocytosis or leukopenia, low thrombocyte count, low sodium level, elevated urea and elevated arterial pH were added, while gastro-intestinal symptoms and hypotension were no longer significant. The area under the receiver operating characteristics curve was 0.66 (95% confidence interval 0.63–0.70) for the first model and 0.76 (95% confidence interval 0.73–0.79) for the second model. Conclusion In conclusion, in patients hospitalized with CAP, bacteraemia was moderately predictable using clinical parameters only. We recommend against the use of a risk prediction model for the decision to obtain blood cultures.
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2012
Douwe F. Postma; Sanjay U.C. Sankatsing; Steven Thijsen; Henrik Endeman
We conducted a retrospective cohort study to assess respiratory colonization before and after the use of chlorhexidine oral decontamination among a cohort of intensive care unit patients who received mechanical ventilation. We observed a decrease in the prevalence of Enterobacteriaceae and an increase in the incidence of fungal colonization. Chlorhexidine oral decontamination might have a differential effect on respiratory colonization.
Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine | 2017
Douwe F. Postma; Cornelis H. van Werkhoven; Jan Jelrik Oosterheert
Purpose of review This review focuses on the evidence base for guideline recommendations on the diagnosis, the optimal choice, timing and duration of empirical antibiotic therapy, and the use of microbiological tests for patients hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP): issues for which guidelines are frequently used as a quick reference. Furthermore, we will discuss possibilities for future research in these topics. Recent findings Many national and international guideline recommendations, even on critical elements of CAP management, are based on low-to-moderate quality evidence. Summary The diagnosis and management of CAP has hardly changed for decades. The recommendation to cover atypical pathogens in all hospitalized CAP patients is based on observational studies only and is challenged by two recent trials. The following years, improved diagnostic testing, radiologically by low-dose Computed Tomography or ultrasound and/or microbiologically by point-of-care multiplex PCR, has the potential to largely influence the choice and start of antibiotic therapy in hospitalized CAP patients. Rapid microbiological testing will hopefully improve antibiotic de-escalation or early pathogen-directed therapy, both potent ways of reducing broad-spectrum antibiotic use. Current guideline recommendations on the timing and duration of antibiotic therapy are based on limited evidence, but will be hard to improve.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015
van Werkhoven Ch; Douwe F. Postma; Marc J.M. Bonten
n engl j med 373;7 nejm.org august 13, 2015 683 cantly increased rate of stroke in the thrombectomy group. Jolicœur et al. hypothesize that stent deployment in a thrombus-laden coronary lesion may nullify a potential benefit of thrombectomy and that delayed stenting after thrombectomy accompanied by the administration of antithrombotic agents might be more efficacious. The TOTAL Optical Coherence Tomography substudy, which included 214 patients, showed that the residual thrombus volume at the culprit lesion was relatively small after manual thrombectomy,3 a finding that suggests that the failure of thrombectomy is not due to the presence of large amounts of residual thrombus, an observation that may have important implications for future investigative work in this area.
Drugs & Aging | 2018
Inger van Heijl; Valentijn A. Schweitzer; Lufang Zhang; Paul D. van der Linden; Cornelis H. van Werkhoven; Douwe F. Postma
The elderly are more susceptible to infections, which is reflected in the incidence and mortality of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) increasing with age. Several aspects of antimicrobial use for LRTIs in elderly patients should be considered to determine appropriateness. We discuss possible differences in microbial etiology between elderly and younger adults, definitions of inappropriate antimicrobial use for LRTIs currently found in the literature, along with their results, and the possible negative impact of antimicrobial therapy at both an individual and community level. Finally, we propose that both antimicrobial stewardship interventions and novel rapid diagnostic techniques may optimize antimicrobial use in elderly patients with LRTIs.
bioRxiv | 2017
Valentijn A. Schweitzer; Maarten van Smeden; Douwe F. Postma; Jan Jelrik Oosterheert; Marc J. M. Bonten; Cornelis H. van Werkhoven
OBJECTIVES The Response Adjusted for Days of Antibiotic Risk (RADAR)-statistic was proposed to improve efficiency of antibiotic stewardship trials. We studied the behavior of RADAR in a non-inferiority trial in which a beta-lactam monotherapy strategy (BL, n=656) was non-inferior to fluoroquinolone monotherapy (FQL, n=888) for moderately-severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) patients. METHODS Patients were ranked according to clinical outcome, using five or eight categories, and antibiotic use. RADAR was calculated as the probability that the BL group had a more favorable ranking than the FQL group. To investigate the sensitivity of RADAR to detrimental clinical outcome we simulated increasing rates of 90-day mortality in the BL group and performed the RADAR and non-inferiority analysis. RESULTS The RADAR of the BL-group compared to the FQL group was 60.3% (95% confidence interval 57.9%-62.7%) using five and 58.4% (95% CI 56.0%-60.9%) using eight clinical outcome categories, all in favor of BL. Sample sizes for RADAR were 250 and 580 patients per study arm using five or eight clinical outcome categories, respectively, reflecting 38% and 89% of the original non-inferiority sample size calculation. With simulated mortality rates, loss of non-inferiority of the BL-group occurred at a relative risk of 1.125 in the conventional analysis, whereas using RADAR the BL-group lost superiority at a relative risk of mortality of 1.25 and 1.5, with eight and five clinical outcome categories, respectively. CONCLUSIONS RADAR favored BL over FQL therapy for CAP. Although RADAR required fewer patients than conventional non-inferiority analysis, the statistic was less sensitive to detrimental outcomes.