Eravacycline use in immunocompromised patients: multicenter evaluation of timely versus late initiation on clinical outcomes
Recommended Citation
Kunz Coyne AJ, Alosaimy S, Lucas K, Morrisette T, Molina KC, DeKerlegand A, Schrack MR, Kang-Birken SL, Hobbs ALV, Agee J, Perkins NB, 3rd, Biagi M, Pierce M, Truong J, Andrade J, Bouchard J, Gore T, King MA, Pullinger BM, Claeys KC, Herbin S, Cosimi R, Tart S, Veve MP, Jones BM, Rojas LM, Feehan AK, Zhao JJ, Witucki P, and Rybak MJ. Eravacycline use in immunocompromised patients: multicenter evaluation of timely versus late initiation on clinical outcomes. Microbiol Spectr 2025;13(10):e0056525.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-7-2025
Publication Title
Microbiol Spectr
Abstract
Infections from multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria lead to worse outcomes in immunocompromised patients. Eravacycline (ERV) is effective against MDR gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, but its effects in immunocompromised populations remain unstudied. We aimed to evaluate clinical end points of immunocompromised patients receiving timely versus late ERV therapy. This multicenter, retrospective, observational study (October 2018 to September 2022) included adult immunocompromised patients hospitalized and treated with ERV for ≥ 72 h. The primary outcome was a composite of all-cause 30-day mortality, failure to improve clinically while on ERV, and/or microbial recurrence within 30 days of ERV initiation. Inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) and Kaplan-Meier analyzes were used. Eighty-two patients from 17 US centers were included (median age 62 years; 59% male; intensive care unit admissions 57%). In the unadjusted cohort, timely ERV significantly reduced odds of clinical treatment failure (odds ratio [OR]: 0.321, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.129-0.800, P = 0.012) and microbial recurrence (OR: 0.545, 95% CI: 0.326-0.913, P = 0.034) compared to late ERV; in the IPTW-adjusted cohort, these associations remained significant with ORs of 0.675 (95% CI: 0.465-0.979, P = 0.029) for treatment failure and 0.384 (95% CI: 0.142-0.943, P = 0.041) for recurrence. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed a higher cumulative proportion of clinical treatment failure in the late ERV group (57%) compared to the timely ERV group (30%, P = 0.013), with a significantly longer time to clinical treatment failure in the timely ERV group (log-rank P = 0.034). Timely initiation of ERV in immunocompromised patients may improve clinical outcomes by reducing treatment failure and microbial recurrence compared to later initiation.
IMPORTANCE: This multicenter, retrospective study evaluates the impact of timely versus late initiation of eravacycline (ERV) in immunocompromised patients with multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacterial infections. Immunocompromised patients face heightened risks of severe infections due to weakened immune defenses and limited treatment options, yet data on ERV use in this population are scarce. Our findings demonstrate that timely ERV initiation ≤ 72 h from index culture collection) significantly reduces clinical treatment failure and microbial recurrence compared to late initiation, with inverse probability of treatment weighting-adjusted odds ratios of 0.675 (P = 0.029) for treatment failure and 0.384 (P = 0.041) for recurrence. Kaplan-Meier analysis further confirms that delayed ERV therapy is associated with a higher cumulative incidence of clinical failure (57% vs 30%, P = 0.013). These results highlight the importance of early ERV initiation in optimizing outcomes for immunocompromised patients and addressing the growing challenge of MDR infections, emphasizing the need for further prospective studies to confirm these findings.
Medical Subject Headings
Humans; Male; Female; Retrospective Studies; Middle Aged; Immunocompromised Host; Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use/administration & dosage; Aged; Treatment Outcome; Drug Resistance; Multiple; Bacterial/drug effects; Tetracyclines/therapeutic use/administration & dosage; Adult; antimicrobial stewardship; eravacycline; immunocompromised; multidrug-resistant
PubMed ID
40856499
Volume
13
Issue
10
First Page
0056525
Last Page
0056525
