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Recent guidelines for managing septic shock when Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a known or suspected pathogen have recommended empirical combination therapy with at least two anti-pseudomonal antibiotics of different classes; however, supporting evidence is sparse. Now, in a retrospective cohort study encompassing 14 hospitals in Italy, Vena et al. compared outcomes of P. aeruginosa septic shock in patients who had received adequate empirical combination therapy (AECT; 24 patients) or monotherapy (AEMT; 74 patients). The AECT group was significantly younger (median age, 60 vs. 70), had lower Charlson comorbidity scores (2 and 4), and were more likely to have multidrug-resistant P. aeruginosa than the AEMT group.
Thirty-day all-cause mortality was…