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Philippe Bernard a Department of
Dermatology, Hôpital Robert-Debré, 51092 Reims, France, b Department of
Internal Medicine, Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, 75013 Paris,
France, c Department of Dermatology, Hôpital Trousseau, 37044 Tours,
France
Correspondence to: P Bernard pbernard{at}chu-reims.fr
Objective:
To assess the efficacy and safety of oral pristinamycin versus intravenous then oral penicillin to treat erysipelas in patients in hospital.
What is already known on this topic
Few studies have evaluated the efficacy of oral treatment for
erysipelas What this study adds
Design:
Multicentre, parallel group, open labelled, randomised non-inferiority trial.
Setting:
22 French hospitals.
Participants:
289 adults admitted to hospital with erysipelas.
Results:
At follow up (day 25-45) the cure rate
(primary efficacy end point) for the per protocol populations was 81%
(83/102) for pristinamycin and 67% (68/102) for penicillin. The
planned interim analysis (global one sided type I error 5%) showed
that the one sided 97.06% confidence interval of the observed
difference (pristinamycin
penicillin) between cure rates (3.3% to
) exceeded the
10% non-inferiority threshold. For the intention
to treat populations the cure rate at follow up was 65% (90/138) for
pristinamycin and 53% (79/150) for penicillin, with the one sided
97.06% confidence interval of the observed difference between cure
rates (1.7% to
) exceeding the
10% non-inferiority threshold.
That the lower limit of the confidence interval exceeded the -10%
threshold and was also >0 supports the hypothesis that pristinamycin
is significantly superior at the 5% level. More adverse events related
to treatment, as assessed by the investigators, were reported in the
pristinamycin group than in the penicillin group. Most adverse events
involved the gastrointestinal tract (nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea)
but were minor and usually did not require discontinuation of treatment.
Conclusion:
Pristinamycin could be an alternative to
the standard intravenous then oral penicillin regimen used to treat erysipelas in adults in hospital, with the advantages of oral first
line therapy.
The reference treatment for erysipelas is intravenous penicillin, which
requires admission to hospital
Oral pristinamycin is at least as effective as intravenous then oral
penicillin to treat erysipelas in adult inpatients, with the advantage
of oral first line treatment