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Table 2 Summary of outcome definition for each included study in PICO 1

From: Impact of attaining aggressive vs. conservative PK/PD target on the clinical efficacy of beta-lactams for the treatment of Gram-negative infections in the critically ill patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Study

Clinical cure

Microbiological failure

Beta-lactam resistance occurrence

Mortality rate

Survival rate

Wong et al. [20]

Resolution (disappearance of all signs and symptoms related to the infection) or improvement (marked or moderate reduction in the severity and/or number of signs and symptoms of infection) clinically as documented by independent clinicians in patients’ progress notes

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Carriè et al. [21]

Favourable clinical response (resolution of fever, organ dysfunction, clinical and biological symptoms of the initial infection) with no need for escalating antibiotics during treatment and/or within 15 days after end of treatment. Superinfections due to new causative pathogens with natural resistance to the initial antimicrobial therapy were not considered as therapeutic failure

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Abdulla et al. [22]

Reduction in ICU length of stay

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Survival rate at 30-day after starting antibiotic therapy

Alshaer et al. [23]

Not assessed

Not assessed

Development of resistance of a Gram-negative organism to the original selected beta-lactam, to which it was susceptible

In-hospital mortality rate

Not assessed

Taccone et al. [24]

Lack of acquisition of early Gram-negative infections and/or early MDR acquisition or infection (i.e., within 14 days after the transplantation)

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Gatti et al. [7]

Not assessed

Persistence of the same gram-negative pathogen isolated from index culture after ≥ 7 days from starting beta-lactam treatment

The increase of the MIC of the clinical isolate beyond the EUCAST clinical breakpoint for the specific selected beta-lactam

Not assessed

Not assessed

Chua et al. [25]

Improvement in presenting signs and symptoms of infection and/or inflammatory markers, and/or discontinuation, de-escalation, or oral conversion of initial beta-lactam therapy

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Survival rate at 14-day

Zhao et al. [26]

Disappearance of all signs and symptoms related to infection or a marked or moderate reduction in the severity and/or number of signs and symptoms of infection

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Alshaer et al. [27]

Resolution of infection-related symptoms present at the start of therapy, the resolution or lack of progression of radiological signs of pneumonia without change or addition of antibiotic therapy, and non-initiation of a new antibiotic within 48 h of stopping the original one

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Survival rate at 28-day

Gatti et al. [28]

Not assessed

Persistence of the same gram-negative pathogen isolated from index culture after ≥ 7 days from starting beta-lactam treatment

Not assessed

Not assessed

Not assessed

Alshaer et al. [6]

Resolution of infection-related symptoms at day-7

Not assessed

Not assessed

30-day mortality rate

Not assessed

Gatti et al. [29]

Not assessed

Persistence of the same gram-negative pathogen isolated from index culture after ≥ 7 days from starting beta-lactam treatment

The increase of the MIC of the clinical isolate beyond the EUCAST clinical breakpoint for the specific selected beta-lactam

Not assessed

Not assessed

  1. ICU intensive care unit, MDR multidrug-resistant