Kozyrskyj A L, Hildes-Ripstein G E, Longstaffe S E, Wincott J L, Sitar D S, Klassen T P, Moffatt M E
Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, 750 Bannatyne Avenue, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, R3E 0W3.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2000(2):CD001095. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001095.
Otitis media is a common pediatric problem, for which antibiotics are frequently prescribed.
To determine the effectiveness of a short course of antibiotics (less than seven days) in comparison to a longer course (seven days or greater) for the treatment of acute otitis media in children.
The medical literature was searched for randomized controlled studies of the treatment of ear infections in children with antibiotics published from January 1966 to July 1997. Search last updated March 1998.
Studies were included if they met the following criteria: subjects one month to 18 years of age, clinical diagnosis of ear infection, no previous antimicrobial therapy and randomization to treatment with less than seven days versus seven days or more of antibiotics.
Data on treatment outcomes were extracted from individual studies, and combined in the form of a summary odds ratio. A summary odds ratio (OR) equivalent to one indicated that the treatment failure rate following less than seven days of antibiotic treatment was similar to the failure rate following seven days or more of antibiotic.
The summary OR for treatment outcomes at eight to 19 days in 1,524 children treated with short-acting antibiotics for five days versus eight to 10 days was 1.52, 95% CI: 1.17-1.98, but by 20 to 30 days outcomes between treatment groups (n=2,115) were comparable (OR=1.22, 95% CI:0.98-1.54). The absolute difference in treatment failure (Random effects model RD=2.9%, 95%CI:-0.3% to 6.1%) at 20 to 30 days suggests that at minimum 17 children would need to be treated with the long course of short-acting antibiotics to avoid one treatment failure. Similarity in outcomes was observed for up to three months following therapy (OR=1.16,95% CI=0.9-1.5). Comparable outcomes were shown between treatment with ceftriaxone or azithromycin, and more than seven days of other antibiotics.
REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS: This review suggests that five days of short-acting antibiotic is effective treatment for uncomplicated ear infections in children.
中耳炎是常见的儿科疾病,抗生素是常用的治疗药物。
比较短期(少于7天)与长期(7天或更长时间)使用抗生素治疗儿童急性中耳炎的疗效。
检索1966年1月至1997年7月发表的关于使用抗生素治疗儿童耳部感染的随机对照研究的医学文献。检索最后更新于1998年3月。
符合以下标准的研究纳入:年龄1个月至18岁的受试者、耳部感染的临床诊断、既往未接受过抗菌治疗,且随机分为接受少于7天与7天或更长时间抗生素治疗的组。
从各研究中提取治疗结果数据,并以汇总比值比的形式进行合并。汇总比值比(OR)等于1表明,抗生素治疗少于7天的治疗失败率与治疗7天或更长时间的失败率相似。
1524名接受短效抗生素治疗5天与8至10天的儿童,在8至19天的治疗结果汇总OR为1.52,95%置信区间:1.17 - 1.98,但到20至30天,治疗组(n = 2115)的结果具有可比性(OR = 1.22,95%置信区间:0.98 - 1.54)。20至30天治疗失败的绝对差异(随机效应模型RD = 2.9%,95%置信区间:-0.3%至6.1%)表明,至少需要17名儿童接受长效短效抗生素治疗以避免一次治疗失败。治疗后长达三个月观察到结果相似(OR = 1.16,95%置信区间 = 0.9 - 1.5)。头孢曲松或阿奇霉素治疗与超过7天的其他抗生素治疗显示出可比的结果。
本综述表明,5天短效抗生素治疗对儿童单纯性耳部感染有效。