Background: The aim of this study was to clarify the potential advantages of a low-dose regimen of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole prophylaxis to prevent Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP) in transplant recipients (80/400 mg/d every day or 160/800 mg/d every other day) with those obtained from the full-dose prophylaxis (160/800 mg/d every day) or no prophylaxis.
Methods: Prospectively randomized and retrospectively case controlled studies were selected.
Results: Four studies matched the inclusion criteria-2 randomized and 2 case controls-for a total of 570 patients. The pneumonia incidence was 0% after full-dose prophylaxis (0/181), 1% after the low-dose regimen (1/105), and 11% with no prophylaxis (31/284). Pneumonia occurrences were significant lower between the full-dose prophylaxis versus the no prophylaxis group (0% vs 11%; P < .001), and between the low-dose and no prophylaxis groups (1% vs 11%; P < .001). There was no difference between patients receiving the full-dose prophylaxis versus the low-dose regimen (0% vs 1%; P = NS).
Conclusions: The low-dose gives similar results as the full-dose regimen for the prevention of PJP and seems a feasible, safe option for transplanted patients.