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Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden

Background: The elderly use antibiotics frequently due to their increasing infection susceptibility. Given the high and increasing proportion of elderly in the population, their antibiotic use is substantial. Objective: This study aimed to compare antibiotic use in the elderly in the ambulatory care...

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Autores principales: Kusuma, Ikhwan Yuda, Matuz, Maria, Bordás, Réka, Juhasz Haverinen, Maria, Bahar, Muh. Akbar, Hajdu, Edit, Visnyovszki, Ádám, Ruzsa, Roxána, Doró, Péter, Engi, Zsófi, Csupor, Dezső, Benko, Ria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9714540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36467037
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.1042418
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author Kusuma, Ikhwan Yuda
Matuz, Maria
Bordás, Réka
Juhasz Haverinen, Maria
Bahar, Muh. Akbar
Hajdu, Edit
Visnyovszki, Ádám
Ruzsa, Roxána
Doró, Péter
Engi, Zsófi
Csupor, Dezső
Benko, Ria
author_facet Kusuma, Ikhwan Yuda
Matuz, Maria
Bordás, Réka
Juhasz Haverinen, Maria
Bahar, Muh. Akbar
Hajdu, Edit
Visnyovszki, Ádám
Ruzsa, Roxána
Doró, Péter
Engi, Zsófi
Csupor, Dezső
Benko, Ria
author_sort Kusuma, Ikhwan Yuda
collection PubMed
description Background: The elderly use antibiotics frequently due to their increasing infection susceptibility. Given the high and increasing proportion of elderly in the population, their antibiotic use is substantial. Objective: This study aimed to compare antibiotic use in the elderly in the ambulatory care sector between Hungary and Sweden. Methods: This retrospective, descriptive, cross-national, comparative study included antibacterial use data from the Hungarian National Health Insurance Fund and the Swedish eHealth Agency. Antibiotic use (anatomical therapeutical chemical: J01) was expressed as the number of prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/year or month and was further stratified by age and sex. Results: Antibiotic exposure was higher in the Hungarian elderly population (649.8 prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/year) compared to its Swedish counterparts (545.0 prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/year). Hungary had a similar scale of antibacterial exposure across all elderly age subgroups, with different trends in males and females, while Sweden had a stepwise increase in antibiotic exposure by age in both sexes. The seasonal fluctuation was high in Hungary and reached a peak of 80.7 prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/month in January 2017, while even antibiotic use was detected throughout the year in Sweden. The pattern of antibiotic use in the elderly considerably differed between the two countries. Penicillin and beta-lactamase combinations, such as co-amoxiclav, were more frequently used in Hungary than in Sweden (19.08% vs 1.83% of corresponding total ambulatory antibiotic use). Likewise, quinolones were more commonly used in Hungary than in Sweden (34.53% vs. 9.98). The elderly in Sweden were mostly prescribed narrow spectra penicillins (26.71% vs. 0.29% in Hungary). Conclusion: This cross-national comparison revealed important differences in all aspects of antibiotic use in the elderly between the two countries. The identical scale and pattern of antibiotic use cannot be anticipated due to the poorer health status of the Hungarian elderly population. However, the substantial differences indicate some room for improvement in the antibiotic prescription for the Hungarian elderly.
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spelling pubmed-97145402022-12-02 Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden Kusuma, Ikhwan Yuda Matuz, Maria Bordás, Réka Juhasz Haverinen, Maria Bahar, Muh. Akbar Hajdu, Edit Visnyovszki, Ádám Ruzsa, Roxána Doró, Péter Engi, Zsófi Csupor, Dezső Benko, Ria Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Background: The elderly use antibiotics frequently due to their increasing infection susceptibility. Given the high and increasing proportion of elderly in the population, their antibiotic use is substantial. Objective: This study aimed to compare antibiotic use in the elderly in the ambulatory care sector between Hungary and Sweden. Methods: This retrospective, descriptive, cross-national, comparative study included antibacterial use data from the Hungarian National Health Insurance Fund and the Swedish eHealth Agency. Antibiotic use (anatomical therapeutical chemical: J01) was expressed as the number of prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/year or month and was further stratified by age and sex. Results: Antibiotic exposure was higher in the Hungarian elderly population (649.8 prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/year) compared to its Swedish counterparts (545.0 prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/year). Hungary had a similar scale of antibacterial exposure across all elderly age subgroups, with different trends in males and females, while Sweden had a stepwise increase in antibiotic exposure by age in both sexes. The seasonal fluctuation was high in Hungary and reached a peak of 80.7 prescriptions/1000 inhabitants/month in January 2017, while even antibiotic use was detected throughout the year in Sweden. The pattern of antibiotic use in the elderly considerably differed between the two countries. Penicillin and beta-lactamase combinations, such as co-amoxiclav, were more frequently used in Hungary than in Sweden (19.08% vs 1.83% of corresponding total ambulatory antibiotic use). Likewise, quinolones were more commonly used in Hungary than in Sweden (34.53% vs. 9.98). The elderly in Sweden were mostly prescribed narrow spectra penicillins (26.71% vs. 0.29% in Hungary). Conclusion: This cross-national comparison revealed important differences in all aspects of antibiotic use in the elderly between the two countries. The identical scale and pattern of antibiotic use cannot be anticipated due to the poorer health status of the Hungarian elderly population. However, the substantial differences indicate some room for improvement in the antibiotic prescription for the Hungarian elderly. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-11-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9714540/ /pubmed/36467037 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.1042418 Text en Copyright © 2022 Kusuma, Matuz, Bordás, Juhasz Haverinen, Bahar, Hajdu, Visnyovszki, Ruzsa, Doró, Engi, Csupor and Benko. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Kusuma, Ikhwan Yuda
Matuz, Maria
Bordás, Réka
Juhasz Haverinen, Maria
Bahar, Muh. Akbar
Hajdu, Edit
Visnyovszki, Ádám
Ruzsa, Roxána
Doró, Péter
Engi, Zsófi
Csupor, Dezső
Benko, Ria
Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden
title Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden
title_full Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden
title_fullStr Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden
title_short Antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: A comparison between Hungary and Sweden
title_sort antibiotic use in elderly patients in ambulatory care: a comparison between hungary and sweden
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9714540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36467037
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2022.1042418
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