Tailoring antibiotics to the patient reduces infections in prostate examinations

by time news


Diagnosing prostate cancer is done by means of a prostate biopsy, in which small pieces of tissue are taken from the prostate

If prostate cancer is suspected, a small piece of prostate tissue is taken for further examination. This can lead to infections, for which patients are preventively given an antibiotic. The number of infections decreases further when the antibiotic is tailored to the patient. This is the conclusion of research by Radboud university medical center.

Diagnosing prostate cancer is done by means of a prostate biopsy, in which small pieces of tissue are taken from the prostate. During such a biopsy, the doctor in most cases punctures the prostate via the intestine. Intestinal bacteria can cause an infection of the prostate or urinary tract. To prevent an infection, patients are preventively given the antibiotic ciprofloxacin. But this drug does not work in all patients, because intestinal bacteria have become increasingly insensitive to it. The result is more infections after prostate biopsy, putting patients at risk for serious disease. This can lead to blood poisoning, hospitalization and, in rare cases, death.

Researchers at Radboud university medical center therefore wanted to find out whether it would be better to prescribe tailor-made antibiotics for patients whose intestinal bacteria are resistant to the usual treatment. This turned out to be the case, says research physician Sofie Tops: ‘One group of patients received the standard treatment with ciprofloxacin. In the other group, we investigated who had gut bacteria that are insensitive to this drug. Those patients received customized antibiotics. In this second group we saw 2.5% infections within seven days after the biopsy, in the group with the standard treatment 4.3%.’

Six times greater risk of infection
When the researchers only looked at the group that received the standard antibiotic, a clear difference emerged. There, 14.7% of the men with insensitive gut bacteria developed an infection, versus 2.4% of the men with sensitive gut bacteria. This means that patients with refractory gut bacteria who received the standard antibiotic were six times more likely to develop an infection after prostate biopsy than patients with sensitive gut bacteria. A big difference, Tops agrees. ‘This shows that tailor-made antibiotics can contribute to fewer infections after prostate biopsy.’

Nevertheless, some of the patients who used a tailor-made antibiotic still developed an infection. Tops and her colleagues suspect that this is due to the amount of intestinal bacteria. “We want to investigate this further. There is also another way to lower the risk of an infection. It has been proven effective to disinfect the intestine with iodine prior to the examination. We do that too little. If we combine this with tailor-made antibiotics, the risk may drop even further. This is not only important in the Netherlands, but also in the rest of the world, where antibiotic resistance is a major problem in some parts.’


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Author name and/or edited by:
Radboudumc
Photographer or photo agency: :
INGImages
Source for this article: :
Radboudumc
What is the URL at this source?:
https://www.radboudumc.nl/nieuws/2022/antibiotica-op-maat-vermindert-infecties-bij-prostaatonderzoek
Original title:
Tailor-made antibiotics reduce infections in prostate examinations
Target audience:
Healthcare professionals
Datum:
2022-12-29

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