Clindamycin Compared with Penicillin for the Treatment of Anaerobic Lung Abscess
- MATTHEW E. LEVISON, M.D.;
- CAROLINA T. MANGURA, M.D.;
- BENNETT LORBER, M.D.;
- ELIAS ABRUTYN, M.D.;
- EDWARD L. PESANTI, M.D.;
- RICHARD S. LEVY, M.D.;
- ROB ROY MACGREGOR, M.D.; and
- ANDREW R. SCHWARTZ, M.D.
Abstract
The clinical efficacy of clindamycin was compared with that of penicillin in a randomized study of the treatment of community-acquired putrid lung abscess. After starting therapy, patients treated with clindamycin had a shorter febrile period and fewer days of fetid sputum than patients treated with penicillin (mean 4.4 versus 7.6 days and 4.2 versus 8.0 days, respectively, p < 0.05). Four of 20 patients treated with penicillin had clinically significant pulmonary or pleural extension of their infection within 10 days after starting therapy; this was not found in any of 19 patients treated with clindamycin (p < 0.05). Penicillin treatment failed in two additional patients after 20 days of therapy. Within 1 month after treatment, 1 of 4 patients given penicillin for 3 weeks had relapse, but none of the 13 patients given clindamycin for 3 or 6 weeks, and none of the 5 patients given penicillin for 6 weeks had relapse. Overall, only 8 of 15 patients treated with penicillin who could be followed to the end of the study were cured, whereas all 13 patients treated with clindamycin who could be followed were cured (p < 0.01). These results suggest that penicillin may not be optimal therapy for anaerobic lung abscess.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Medical College of Pennsylvania and Hospital, Temple University Health Sciences Center, the Philadelphia Veterans Administration Hospital, Albert Einstein Hospital (Northern Division), the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, and Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the College of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey; and the University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa.
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▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Matthew E. Levisoh, M.D.; The Medical College of Pennsylvania, 3300 Henry Avenue; Philadelphia, PA 19129.
- © 1983 American College of Physicians
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