Litcius/Paper detail

Selective digestive decontamination, a seemingly effective regimen with individual benefit or a flawed concept with population harm?

James C. Hurley

2021Critical Care24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Selective digestive decontamination (SDD) regimens, variously constituted with topical antibiotic prophylaxis (TAP) and protocolized parenteral antibiotic prophylaxis (PPAP), appear highly effective for preventing ICU-acquired infections but only within randomized concurrent control trials (RCCT's). Confusingly, SDD is also a concept which, if true, implies population benefit. The SDD concept can finally be reified in humans using the broad accumulated evidence base, including studies of TAP and PPAP that used non-concurrent controls (NCC), as a natural experiment. However, this test implicates overall population harm with higher event rates associated with SDD use within the ICU context.

Topics & Concepts

Intensive care medicineHarmContext (archaeology)RegimenPopulationMedicineRandomized controlled trialInternal medicinePsychologyBiologyEnvironmental healthSocial psychologyPaleontologyNosocomial Infections in ICUAntibiotic Use and ResistanceClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research