Abstract

In a prospective Swiss multicenter study, 119 children (aged three weeks to 15.5 years) with acute bacterial meningitis were treated with single daily doses of ceftriaxone (100 mg/kg on days one and two and 60 mg/kg thereafter). All patients were randomly assigned to either short course (four, six, seven days) or full course (eight, 12, 14 days) therapy depending on whether they had contracted meningococcal, Haemophilus influenzae type b or pneumococcal meningitis. Bacteriological cure was obtained in 92 children who fully completed the study and in all the 20 culture-positive of the 27 children secondarily excluded from the study for failure to meet all bacteriological and initial safety criteria for continuation in protocol (secondary exclusions). Complete clinical recovery was noted in 105 of 119 patients (88%) and was as frequent in the short course (91%) as in the full course (89%), and as in the secondary exclusion (81%) group. All patients survived. At follow-up examination three to six months after hospital discharge only seven infants and seven children (11.8%), mostly those with poor presentation on admission (p = 0.0012), showed residual neurological sequelae. Side effects of antibiotic therapy were minor but more frequent, albeit not statistically significant (p = 0.065), in children receiving the full course therapy. The results of this study suggest that short course treatment of acute bacterial meningitis in children with single daily ceftriaxone monotherapy is as efficacious as full course therapy and at least as well tolerated.

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