Empiric therapy is a
medical term referring to the initiation of treatment prior to determination of a firm diagnosis. It is most often used when
antibiotics are given to a person before the specific
microorganism causing an
infection is known. Examples of this include antibiotics given for
pneumonia ,
urinary tract infections, and suspected
bacterial meningitis in newborns aged 0 to 6 months.
Empiric antibiotics are typically broad-spectrum, in that they treat a wide variety of possible microorganisms. When more information is known (as from a blood culture), treatment may be changed to a different antibiotic which more specifically targets the microorganism known to be causing disease.
See also