Lutters M, Vogt N
Département de Gériatrie, Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève, 3, Chemin Pont-Bochet, 1226 Thônex, Switzerland.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2002(3):CD001535. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001535.
Urinary tract infections are common in elderly patients. Authors of non systematic literature reviews often recommend longer treatment durations (7-14 days) for older patients than for younger women, but the scientific evidence for such recommendations is not clear.
To determine the optimal duration of antibiotic treatment for uncomplicated symptomatic lower urinary tract infections in elderly women.
We contacted known investigators and pharmaceutical companies marketing antibiotics used to treat urinary tract infections, screened the reference list of identified articles, reviews and books, and searched the following data bases: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Healthstar, Popline, Gerolit, Bioethics Line, The Cochrane Library, Dissertation Abstracts International, Index to Scientific & Technical Proceedings.
All randomized controlled trials in which different treatment durations of oral antibiotics for uncomplicated symptomatic lower urinary tract infections in elderly women were compared. We excluded patients with fever or flank pain and those with complicating factors. Trials with treatment durations longer than 14 days or designed for prevention of urinary tract infection were also excluded. No language restriction was applied.
The quality of all selected trials was assessed and data extracted by the reviewers. Main outcome measures were persistence of urinary symptoms (short-term and long-term efficacy), effect on mental and functional status and adverse drug reactions. To compare the different treatment durations, we defined the following categories of duration: single dose, short course (3-6 days) and long course (7-14 days). Relative risk (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated for each trial and outcome and were then combined using a random effects model.
Thirteen trials were included in this review. Six trials compared single dose with short-term treatment (3-6 days), three studies single dose with long-term treatment (7-14 days) and four trials short-term with long term treatment. Eight trials also included younger patients, but provided a subgroup analysis for elderly women. The methodological quality of all trials was low. All trials reported results of bacteriological cure rate; less often clinical outcomes (e.g. improvement or cure of symptoms) were analyzed. Only five trials compared the same antibiotic given for a different length of time. We performed a separate analysis for these trials. The rate of persistent bacteriuria rate at short-term (two weeks post-treatment) was better in the longer treatment group (3-14 days) than in the single dose group (RR 1.84, 95% CI 1.18 to 2.86). However, the rate of persistent bacteria at long term and the clinical cure rate showed no statistically significant difference between the two groups. Patients showed a preference for single dose treatment (RR 0.73, 95% CI 0.66 to 0.88), however this was based on only one trial comparing the same antibiotic. The comparison of short (3-6 days) and longer treatments (7-14 days) did not show any significant difference, but the number of included studies and sample size were low.
REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS: This review suggests that single dose antibiotic treatment is less effective but may be better accepted by the patients than longer treatment durations (3-14 days). In addition there was no significant difference between short course (3-6 days) versus longer course (7-14 days) antibiotics. The methodological quality of the identified trials was poor and the optimal treatment duration could not be determined. We therefore need more appropriately designed randomized controlled trials testing the effect, - on clinical relevant outcomes -, of different treatment durations of a given antibiotic in a strictly defined population of elderly women.
尿路感染在老年患者中很常见。非系统性文献综述的作者通常建议老年患者的治疗疗程(7 - 14天)比年轻女性更长,但此类建议的科学依据并不明确。
确定老年女性单纯性症状性下尿路感染的抗生素最佳治疗疗程。
我们联系了已知的研究人员以及销售用于治疗尿路感染抗生素的制药公司,筛选了已识别文章、综述和书籍的参考文献列表,并检索了以下数据库:医学索引(MEDLINE)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(EMBASE)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、健康之星数据库(Healthstar)、人口健康数据库(Popline)、老年医学文献数据库(Gerolit)、生物伦理学数据库(Bioethics Line)、考克兰图书馆(The Cochrane Library)、国际学位论文摘要数据库(Dissertation Abstracts International)、科技会议录索引(Index to Scientific & Technical Proceedings)。
所有比较老年女性单纯性症状性下尿路感染口服抗生素不同治疗疗程的随机对照试验。我们排除了有发热或胁腹疼痛的患者以及有并发症因素的患者。治疗疗程超过14天或专为预防尿路感染设计的试验也被排除。不设语言限制。
所有入选试验的质量由评审人员评估并提取数据。主要结局指标为尿路症状的持续存在情况(短期和长期疗效)、对精神和功能状态的影响以及药物不良反应。为比较不同治疗疗程,我们定义了以下疗程类别:单剂量、短疗程(3 - 6天)和长疗程(7 - 14天)。为每个试验和结局计算相对风险(RR)和95%置信区间(CI),然后使用随机效应模型进行合并。
本综述纳入了13项试验。6项试验比较了单剂量与短期治疗(3 - 6天),3项研究比较了单剂量与长期治疗(7 - 14天),4项试验比较了短期与长期治疗。8项试验也纳入了年轻患者,但提供了老年女性的亚组分析。所有试验的方法学质量都很低。所有试验都报告了细菌学治愈率结果;较少分析临床结局(如症状改善或治愈)。只有5项试验比较了给予不同时长的同一种抗生素。我们对这些试验进行了单独分析。在短期(治疗后两周),长疗程治疗组(3 - 14天)的持续菌尿率比单剂量组更好(RR 1.84,95% CI 1.18至2.86)。然而,两组在长期的持续菌尿率和临床治愈率上没有统计学显著差异。患者表现出对单剂量治疗的偏好(RR 0.73,95% CI 0.66至0.88),但这仅基于一项比较同一种抗生素的试验。短疗程(3 - 6天)与长疗程(7 - 14天)治疗的比较未显示出任何显著差异,但纳入研究数量和样本量较少。
本综述表明,单剂量抗生素治疗效果较差,但可能比更长疗程(3 - 14天)的治疗更易被患者接受。此外,短疗程(3 - 6天)与长疗程(7 - 14天)抗生素治疗之间没有显著差异。已识别试验的方法学质量较差,无法确定最佳治疗疗程。因此,我们需要更恰当设计的随机对照试验,在严格定义的老年女性人群中测试给定抗生素不同治疗疗程对临床相关结局 的影响。