Cargando…
The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection
While most cases of acute cough are self-limiting, antibiotics are prescribed to over 50%. This proportion is inappropriately high given that benefit from treatment with amoxicillin could only be demonstrated in adults with pneumonia (based on chest radiograph) or combined viral–bacterial infection...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8300796/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34356738 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10070817 |
_version_ | 1783726531172892672 |
---|---|
author | Bruyndonckx, Robin Stuart, Beth Little, Paul Hens, Niel Ieven, Margareta Butler, Christopher C. Verheij, Theo J. M. Goossens, Herman Coenen, Samuel |
author_facet | Bruyndonckx, Robin Stuart, Beth Little, Paul Hens, Niel Ieven, Margareta Butler, Christopher C. Verheij, Theo J. M. Goossens, Herman Coenen, Samuel |
author_sort | Bruyndonckx, Robin |
collection | PubMed |
description | While most cases of acute cough are self-limiting, antibiotics are prescribed to over 50%. This proportion is inappropriately high given that benefit from treatment with amoxicillin could only be demonstrated in adults with pneumonia (based on chest radiograph) or combined viral–bacterial infection (based on modern microbiological methodology). As routine use of chest radiographs and microbiological testing is costly, clinical prediction rules could be used to identify these patient subsets. In this secondary analysis of data from a multicentre randomised controlled trial in adults presenting to primary care with acute cough, we used prediction rules for pneumonia or combined infection and assessed the effect of amoxicillin in patients predicted to have pneumonia or combined infection on symptom duration, symptom severity and illness deterioration. In total, 2056 patients that fulfilled all inclusion criteria were randomised, 1035 to amoxicillin, 1021 to placebo. Neither patients with a predicted pneumonia nor patients with a predicted combined infection were significantly more likely to benefit from amoxicillin. While the studied clinical prediction rules may help primary care clinicians to reduce antibiotic prescribing for low-risk patients, they did not identify adult acute cough patients that would benefit from amoxicillin treatment. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8300796 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | MDPI |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-83007962021-07-24 The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection Bruyndonckx, Robin Stuart, Beth Little, Paul Hens, Niel Ieven, Margareta Butler, Christopher C. Verheij, Theo J. M. Goossens, Herman Coenen, Samuel Antibiotics (Basel) Article While most cases of acute cough are self-limiting, antibiotics are prescribed to over 50%. This proportion is inappropriately high given that benefit from treatment with amoxicillin could only be demonstrated in adults with pneumonia (based on chest radiograph) or combined viral–bacterial infection (based on modern microbiological methodology). As routine use of chest radiographs and microbiological testing is costly, clinical prediction rules could be used to identify these patient subsets. In this secondary analysis of data from a multicentre randomised controlled trial in adults presenting to primary care with acute cough, we used prediction rules for pneumonia or combined infection and assessed the effect of amoxicillin in patients predicted to have pneumonia or combined infection on symptom duration, symptom severity and illness deterioration. In total, 2056 patients that fulfilled all inclusion criteria were randomised, 1035 to amoxicillin, 1021 to placebo. Neither patients with a predicted pneumonia nor patients with a predicted combined infection were significantly more likely to benefit from amoxicillin. While the studied clinical prediction rules may help primary care clinicians to reduce antibiotic prescribing for low-risk patients, they did not identify adult acute cough patients that would benefit from amoxicillin treatment. MDPI 2021-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8300796/ /pubmed/34356738 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10070817 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Article Bruyndonckx, Robin Stuart, Beth Little, Paul Hens, Niel Ieven, Margareta Butler, Christopher C. Verheij, Theo J. M. Goossens, Herman Coenen, Samuel The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection |
title | The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection |
title_full | The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection |
title_fullStr | The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection |
title_full_unstemmed | The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection |
title_short | The Effect of Amoxicillin in Adult Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Acute Cough Predicted to Have Pneumonia or a Combined Viral-Bacterial Infection |
title_sort | effect of amoxicillin in adult patients presenting to primary care with acute cough predicted to have pneumonia or a combined viral-bacterial infection |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8300796/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34356738 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10070817 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT bruyndonckxrobin theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT stuartbeth theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT littlepaul theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT hensniel theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT ievenmargareta theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT butlerchristopherc theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT verheijtheojm theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT goossensherman theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT coenensamuel theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT theeffectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT bruyndonckxrobin effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT stuartbeth effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT littlepaul effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT hensniel effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT ievenmargareta effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT butlerchristopherc effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT verheijtheojm effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT goossensherman effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT coenensamuel effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection AT effectofamoxicillininadultpatientspresentingtoprimarycarewithacutecoughpredictedtohavepneumoniaoracombinedviralbacterialinfection |