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Commentary

Empiric anti-Candida therapy for patients with sepsis in the ICU: how little is too little?

Yoav Golan email

Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Tufts Medical Center, 800 Washington Street, Boston, MA 02111, USA

author email corresponding author email

Critical Care 2009, 13:180doi:10.1186/cc7977

Published: 21 August 2009


See related research by Zilberberg et al., http://ccforum.com/content/13/3/R94

Abstract

Prior analyses suggest that empiric fluconazole for ICU patients with sepsis is cost-effective. Using updated estimates of efficacy and cost, Zilberberg and colleagues compare the use of micafungin with that of fluconazole. The authors conclude that micafungin is an attractive alternative to fluconazole. This conclusion is driven by recent reduction in micafungin's cost and by better activity of micafungin against azole-resistant Candida species. Their results are limited by inflated estimates of efficacy, life expectancy and risk of Candida sepsis. This commentary explores the rationale for early anti-Candida strategies in the ICU and highlights the contribution and limitations of the article by Zilberberg and colleagues.


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