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Comparative Study
. 2025 Mar 13;392(11):1065-1078.
doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2404991. Epub 2024 Nov 20.

Antibiotic Treatment for 7 versus 14 Days in Patients with Bloodstream Infections

BALANCE Investigators, for the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group, the Association of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Disease Canada Clinical Research Network, the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group, and the Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases Clinical Research NetworkNick Daneman  1 Asgar Rishu  2 Ruxandra Pinto  3 Benjamin A Rogers  4 Yahya Shehabi  5 Rachael Parke  6 Deborah Cook  7 Yaseen Arabi  8 John Muscedere  9 Steven Reynolds  10 Richard Hall  11 Dhiraj B Dwivedi  12 Colin McArthur  13 Shay McGuinness  6 Dafna Yahav  14 Bryan Coburn  15 Anna Geagea  16 Pavani Das  17 Phillip Shin  16 Michael Detsky  18 Andrew Morris  19 Michael Fralick  20 Jeff E Powis  21 Christopher Kandel  21 Wendy Sligl  22 Sean M Bagshaw  23 Nishma Singhal  24 Emilie Belley-Cote  25 Richard Whitlock  26 Kosar Khwaja  27 Susan Morpeth  28 Alex Kazemi  29 Anthony Williams  30 Derek R MacFadden  31 Lauralyn McIntyre  32 Jennifer Tsang  33 Francois Lamontagne  34 Alex Carignan  35 John Marshall  36 Jan O Friedrich  37 Robert Cirone  38 Mark Downing  39 Christopher Graham  40 Joshua Davis  41 Erick Duan  42 John Neary  43 Gerald Evans  44 Basem Alraddadi  45 Sameera Al Johani  46 Claudio Martin  47 Sameer Elsayed  48 Ian Ball  49 Francois Lauzier  50 Alexis Turgeon  51   52 Henry T Stelfox  53 John Conly  54 Emily G McDonald  55 Todd C Lee  56 Richard Sullivan  57 Jennifer Grant  58 Ilya Kagan  59 Paul Young  60 Cassie Lawrence  61 Kevin O'Callaghan  62 Matthew Eustace  63 Keat Choong  64 Pierre Aslanian  65 Ulrike Buehner  66 Tom Havey  67 Alexandra Binnie  68 Josef Prazak  69 Brenda Reeve  70 Edward Litton  71 Sylvain Lother  72 Anand Kumar  73 Ryan Zarychanski  74 Tomer Hoffman  75 David Paterson  76 Peter Daley  77 Robert J Commons  78 Emmanuel Charbonney  79 Jean-Francois Naud  80 Sally Roberts  81 Ravindranath Tiruvoipati  82 Sachin Gupta  83 Gordon Wood  84 Omar Shum  85 Spiros Miyakis  85 Peter Dodek  86 Clement Kwok  87 Robert A Fowler  88 The BALANCE Investigators, for the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group, the Association of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Disease Canada Clinical Research Network, the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group, and the Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Network
Collaborators, Affiliations
Comparative Study

Antibiotic Treatment for 7 versus 14 Days in Patients with Bloodstream Infections

BALANCE Investigators, for the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group, the Association of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Disease Canada Clinical Research Network, the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group, and the Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Network et al. N Engl J Med. .

Abstract

Background: Bloodstream infections are associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. Early, appropriate antibiotic therapy is important, but the duration of treatment is uncertain.

Methods: In a multicenter, noninferiority trial, we randomly assigned hospitalized patients (including patients in the intensive care unit [ICU]) who had bloodstream infection to receive antibiotic treatment for 7 days or 14 days. Antibiotic selection, dosing, and route were at the discretion of the treating team. We excluded patients with severe immunosuppression, foci requiring prolonged treatment, single cultures with possible contaminants, or cultures yielding Staphylococcus aureus. The primary outcome was death from any cause by 90 days after diagnosis of the bloodstream infection, with a noninferiority margin of 4 percentage points.

Results: Across 74 hospitals in seven countries, 3608 patients underwent randomization and were included in the intention-to-treat analysis; 1814 patients were assigned to 7 days of antibiotic treatment, and 1794 to 14 days. At enrollment, 55.0% of patients were in the ICU and 45.0% were on hospital wards. Infections were acquired in the community (75.4%), hospital wards (13.4%) and ICUs (11.2%). Bacteremia most commonly originated from the urinary tract (42.2%), abdomen (18.8%), lung (13.0%), vascular catheters (6.3%), and skin or soft tissue (5.2%). By 90 days, 261 patients (14.5%) receiving antibiotics for 7 days had died and 286 patients (16.1%) receiving antibiotics for 14 days had died (difference, -1.6 percentage points [95.7% confidence interval {CI}, -4.0 to 0.8]), which showed the noninferiority of the shorter treatment duration. Patients were treated for longer than the assigned duration in 23.1% of the patients in the 7-day group and in 10.7% of the patients in the 14-day group. A per-protocol analysis also showed noninferiority (difference, -2.0 percentage points [95% CI, -4.5 to 0.6]). These findings were generally consistent across secondary clinical outcomes and across prespecified subgroups defined according to patient, pathogen, and syndrome characteristics.

Conclusions: Among hospitalized patients with bloodstream infection, antibiotic treatment for 7 days was noninferior to treatment for 14 days. (Funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and others; BALANCE ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03005145.).

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