Oral treatment of CAPD-peritonitis with ciprofloxacin

E. W. Boeschoten, E. J. Kuijper, P. Speelman, D. G. Struijk, R. T. Krediet, L. Arisz

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Abstract

Peritonitis is still a major problem in CAPD. The synthetic chemotherapeutic quinolone ciprofloxacin offers new possibilities for oral treatment of this complication. The efficacy of ciprofloxacin as first-line antibiotic was investigated in five consecutive peritonitis episodes of five patients. The dosage was deduced from a pilot study and consisted of an intra-peritoneal loading dose during the first 24 hours. Simultaneously ciprofloxacin was given orally and thereafter only the oral medication was continued. The causative microorganisms in the 5 episodes were (MIC90 in brackets): nonfermentative Gram negative rod, group IVc-2 (0.6 micrograms/ml), S. aureus (0.25 micrograms ml), Strep. faecalis (0.4 micrograms/ml), S. aureus + S. epidermidis (both 0.25 micrograms/ml) and S. aureus (0.13 micrograms/ml). The clinical course was uncomplicated and all episodes were cured with ciprofloxacin monotherapy. In 4 patients all dialysate concentrations exceeded 2.3 micrograms/ml (mean 5.8 micrograms/ml). In one patient dialysate concentrations varied between 2.2 and 7.5 micrograms/ml during the first 24 hrs and between 0.4 and 1.2 micrograms/ml thereafter. Despite these low dialysate concentrations, the episode caused by S. aureus (MIC90 0.25 micrograms/ml) was cured uneventfully. We conclude that ciprofloxacin may be useful for the treatment of CAPD peritonitis. Large interindividual differences in dialysate concentrations should be taken into account
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)126-129
JournalAdvances in peritoneal dialysis. Conference on Peritoneal Dialysis
Volume6
Publication statusPublished - 1990

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