Department of Pediatrics, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Ann Fam Med. 2013 Mar-Apr;11(2):165-72. doi: 10.1370/afm.1449.
Antibiotics are frequently prescribed for acute nonspecific respiratory infections (ARIs), presumably to avoid small risks of progression to serious bacterial illness. However, even low risks of associated adverse drug events could result in many such events at the population level. Our objective was to assess the risks and benefits of antibiotic use in a cohort of patients with ARIs, comparing outcomes of patients who were prescribed antibiotics with outcomes of patients not receiving antibiotics.
We used a June 1986 to August 2006 cohort of adult patients with ARI visits from a UK primary care database. Exposure was an antibiotic prescribed with the visit. Primary outcomes were hospitalization within 15 days for (1) severe adverse drug events (hypersensitivity, diarrhea, seizure, arrhythmia, hepatic or renal failure), and (2) community-acquired pneumonia.
The cohort included 1,531,019 visits with an ARI diagnosis; prescriptions for antibiotics were given in 65% of cases. The adjusted risk difference for treated vs untreated patients per 100,000 visits was 1.07 fewer adverse events (95% CI, -4.52 to 2.38; P = .54) and 8.16 fewer pneumonia hospitalizations (95% CI, -13.24 to -3.08; P = .002). The number needed to treat to prevent 1 hospitalization for pneumonia was 12,255.
Compared with patients with ARI who were not treated with antibiotics, patients who were treated with antibiotics were not at increased risk of severe adverse drug events and had a small decreased risk of pneumonia hospitalization. This small benefit from antibiotics for a common ambulatory diagnosis creates persistent tension; at the societal level, physicians are compelled to reduce antibiotic prescribing, thus minimizing future resistance, whereas at the encounter level, they are compelled to optimize the benefit-risk balance for that patient.
抗生素常被用于治疗急性非特异性呼吸道感染(ARI),推测是为了避免细菌感染进展为严重疾病的小风险。然而,即使是与药物相关的不良事件的低风险也可能导致人群中出现大量此类事件。我们的目的是评估在一组 ARI 患者中使用抗生素的风险和益处,比较接受抗生素治疗的患者与未接受抗生素治疗的患者的结果。
我们使用了英国初级保健数据库中 1986 年 6 月至 2006 年 8 月的一组成人 ARI 就诊患者的队列。暴露是就诊时开的抗生素。主要结局是在 15 天内(1)因严重药物不良反应(过敏、腹泻、癫痫发作、心律失常、肝或肾功能衰竭),(2)社区获得性肺炎住院。
该队列包括 1531019 次 ARI 就诊;在 65%的病例中开出了抗生素处方。每 100000 次就诊接受治疗与未接受治疗的患者的风险差异调整值为 1.07 例不良事件减少(95% CI,-4.52 至 2.38;P =.54)和 8.16 例肺炎住院减少(95% CI,-13.24 至-3.08;P =.002)。为预防 1 例肺炎住院而需要治疗的患者人数为 12255 例。
与未接受抗生素治疗的 ARI 患者相比,接受抗生素治疗的患者发生严重药物不良反应的风险没有增加,而肺炎住院的风险略有降低。这种针对常见门诊诊断的抗生素小获益引起了持续的紧张局势;从社会层面来看,医生被迫减少抗生素的使用,从而最大程度地减少未来的耐药性,而在接触层面,他们必须为该患者优化获益-风险平衡。