Falsey Ann R, Murata Yoshihiko, Walsh Edward E
Departments of Medicine, Rochester General Hospital and University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14621, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2007 Feb 26;167(4):354-60. doi: 10.1001/archinte.167.4.ioi60207. Epub 2007 Jan 22.
Rapid influenza testing decreases antibiotic and ancillary test use in febrile children, yet its effect on the care of hospitalized adults is unexplored. We compared the clinical management of patients with influenza whose rapid antigen test result was positive (Ag+) with the management of those whose rapid antigen test result was negative or the test was not performed (Ag0).
Medical record review was performed on patients with influenza hospitalized during 4 winters (1999-2003). Hospital policy mandated influenza testing (antigen or culture) for all patients with acute cardiopulmonary diseases admitted from November 15 through April 15. A subset of patients participated in an epidemiological study and had reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction or serologic testing performed. Clinical data from Ag+ and Ag0 patients were compared.
Of 166 patients with available records, 86 were Ag+ and 80 were Ag0. Antibiotic use (74 [86%] of 86 patients vs 79 [99%] of 80 patients; P = .002) was less and antibiotic discontinuance (12 [14%] of 86 patients vs 2 [2%] of 80 patients; P=.01) was greater in Ag+ compared with Ag0 patients. No significant differences in antibiotic days, length of hospital stay, or antibiotic complications were noted. Antiviral use (63 [73%] of 86 patients vs 6 [8%] of 80 patients; P<.001) was greater in Ag+ than Ag0 patients. Antigen status was independently associated with withholding or discontinuing antibiotics in multivariate analysis. Of 44 Ag+ patients deemed low risk for bacterial infection, 27 continued to receive antibiotics despite positive influenza test results. These patients more commonly had pulmonary disease and had significantly more abnormal lung examination results (P = .005) compared with those in whom antibiotics were withheld or discontinued.
Rapid influenza testing leads to reductions in antibiotic use in hospitalized adults. Better tools to rule out concomitant bacterial infection are needed to optimize the impact of viral testing.
快速流感检测可减少发热儿童抗生素及辅助检查的使用,但对住院成人治疗的影响尚不清楚。我们比较了快速抗原检测结果为阳性(Ag+)的流感患者与快速抗原检测结果为阴性或未进行检测(Ag0)的患者的临床管理情况。
对4个冬季(1999 - 2003年)住院的流感患者进行病历审查。医院政策规定,11月15日至4月15日收治的所有急性心肺疾病患者均需进行流感检测(抗原或培养)。一部分患者参与了一项流行病学研究,并进行了逆转录聚合酶链反应或血清学检测。比较了Ag+和Ag0患者的临床数据。
在166例有可用记录的患者中,86例为Ag+,80例为Ag0。与Ag0患者相比,Ag+患者的抗生素使用较少(86例患者中的74例[86%] vs 80例患者中的79例[99%];P = 0.002),抗生素停用率较高(86例患者中的12例[14%] vs 80例患者中的2例[2%];P = 0.01)。在抗生素使用天数、住院时间或抗生素并发症方面未发现显著差异。Ag+患者的抗病毒药物使用比Ag0患者更多(86例患者中的63例[73%] vs 80例患者中的6例[8%];P < 0.001)。在多变量分析中,抗原状态与停用或停止使用抗生素独立相关。在44例被认为细菌感染风险低的Ag+患者中,27例尽管流感检测结果为阳性仍继续使用抗生素。与停用或停止使用抗生素的患者相比,这些患者更常患有肺部疾病,肺部检查结果异常的情况也明显更多(P = 0.005)。
快速流感检测可减少住院成人的抗生素使用。需要更好的工具来排除合并细菌感染,以优化病毒检测的影响。