Tonkin-Crine Sarah Kg, Tan Pui San, van Hecke Oliver, Wang Kay, Roberts Nia W, McCullough Amanda, Hansen Malene Plejdrup, Butler Christopher C, Del Mar Chris B
Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Woodstock Road, Oxford, Oxon, UK, OX2 6GG.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Sep 7;9(9):CD012252. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012252.pub2.
Antibiotic resistance is a worldwide health threat. Interventions that reduce antibiotic prescribing by clinicians are expected to reduce antibiotic resistance. Disparate interventions to change antibiotic prescribing behaviour for acute respiratory infections (ARIs) have been trialled and meta-analysed, but not yet synthesised in an overview. This overview synthesises evidence from systematic reviews, rather than individual trials.
To systematically review the existing evidence from systematic reviews on the effects of interventions aimed at influencing clinician antibiotic prescribing behaviour for ARIs in primary care.
We searched the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE), MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Science Citation Index to June 2016. We also searched the reference lists of all included reviews. We ran a pre-publication search in May 2017 and placed additional studies in 'awaiting classification'.We included both Cochrane and non-Cochrane reviews of randomised controlled trials evaluating the effect of any clinician-focussed intervention on antibiotic prescribing behaviour in primary care. Two overview authors independently extracted data and assessed the methodological quality of included reviews using the ROBIS tool, with disagreements reached by consensus or by discussion with a third overview author. We used the GRADE system to assess the quality of evidence in included reviews. The results are presented as a narrative overview.
We included eight reviews in this overview: five Cochrane Reviews (33 included trials) and three non-Cochrane reviews (11 included trials). Three reviews (all Cochrane Reviews) scored low risk across all the ROBIS domains in Phase 2 and low risk of bias overall. The remaining five reviews scored high risk on Domain 4 of Phase 2 because the 'Risk of bias' assessment had not been specifically considered and discussed in the review Results and Conclusions. The trials included in the reviews varied in both size and risk of bias. Interventions were compared to usual care.Moderate-quality evidence indicated that C-reactive protein (CRP) point-of-care testing (risk ratio (RR) 0.78, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.66 to 0.92, 3284 participants, 6 trials), shared decision making (odds ratio (OR) 0.44, 95% CI 0.26 to 0.75, 3274 participants, 3 trials; RR 0.64, 95% CI 0.49 to 0.84, 4623 participants, 2 trials; risk difference -18.44, 95% CI -27.24 to -9.65, 481,807 participants, 4 trials), and procalcitonin-guided management (adjusted OR 0.10, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.14, 1008 participants, 2 trials) probably reduce antibiotic prescribing in general practice. We found moderate-quality evidence that procalcitonin-guided management probably reduces antibiotic prescribing in emergency departments (adjusted OR 0.34, 95% CI 0.28 to 0.43, 2605 participants, 7 trials). The overall effect of these interventions was small (few achieving greater than 50% reduction in antibiotic prescribing, most about a quarter or less), but likely to be clinically important.Compared to usual care, shared decision making probably makes little or no difference to reconsultation for the same illness (RR 0.87, 95% CI 0.74 to 1.03, 1860 participants, 4 trials, moderate-quality evidence), and may make little or no difference to patient satisfaction (RR 0.86, 95% CI 0.57 to 1.30, 1110 participants, 2 trials, low-quality evidence). Similarly, CRP testing probably has little or no effect on patient satisfaction (RR 0.79, 95% CI 0.57 to 1.08, 689 participants, 2 trials, moderate-quality evidence) or reconsultation (RR 1.08, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.27, 5132 participants, 4 trials, moderate-quality evidence). Procalcitonin-guided management probably results in little or no difference in treatment failure in general practice compared to normal care (adjusted OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.73 to 1.24, 1008 participants, 2 trials, moderate-quality evidence), however it probably reduces treatment failure in the emergency department compared to usual care (adjusted OR 0.76, 95% CI 0.61 to 0.95, 2605 participants, 7 trials, moderate-quality evidence).The quality of evidence for interventions focused on clinician educational materials and decision support in reducing antibiotic prescribing in general practice was either low or very low (no pooled result reported) and trial results were highly heterogeneous, therefore we were unable draw conclusions about the effects of these interventions. The use of rapid viral diagnostics in emergency departments may have little or no effect on antibiotic prescribing (RR 0.86, 95% CI 0.61 to 1.22, 891 participants, 3 trials, low-quality evidence) and may result in little to no difference in reconsultation (RR 0.86, 95% CI 0.59 to 1.25, 200 participants, 1 trial, low-quality evidence).None of the trials in the included reviews reported on management costs for the treatment of an ARI or any associated complications.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found evidence that CRP testing, shared decision making, and procalcitonin-guided management reduce antibiotic prescribing for patients with ARIs in primary care. These interventions may therefore reduce overall antibiotic consumption and consequently antibiotic resistance. There do not appear to be negative effects of these interventions on the outcomes of patient satisfaction and reconsultation, although there was limited measurement of these outcomes in the trials. This should be rectified in future trials.We could gather no information about the costs of management, and this along with the paucity of measurements meant that it was difficult to weigh the benefits and costs of implementing these interventions in practice.Most of this research was undertaken in high-income countries, and it may not generalise to other settings. The quality of evidence for the interventions of educational materials and tools for patients and clinicians was either low or very low, which prevented us from drawing any conclusions. High-quality trials are needed to further investigate these interventions.
抗生素耐药性是一项全球性的健康威胁。预计减少临床医生抗生素处方的干预措施将降低抗生素耐药性。针对急性呼吸道感染(ARI)改变抗生素处方行为的不同干预措施已进行试验和荟萃分析,但尚未在一篇综述中进行综合。本综述综合了系统评价的证据,而非单个试验的证据。
系统评价现有系统评价中关于旨在影响基层医疗中临床医生对ARI抗生素处方行为的干预措施效果的证据。
我们检索了Cochrane系统评价数据库、效果综述文摘数据库(DARE)、MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、PsycINFO和科学引文索引,检索截至2016年6月的数据。我们还检索了所有纳入综述的参考文献列表。我们在2017年5月进行了预发表检索,并将其他研究置于“等待分类”中。我们纳入了Cochrane和非Cochrane对随机对照试验的综述,这些试验评估了任何以临床医生为重点的干预措施对基层医疗中抗生素处方行为的影响。两位综述作者独立提取数据,并使用ROBIS工具评估纳入综述的方法学质量,分歧通过协商一致或与第三位综述作者讨论解决。我们使用GRADE系统评估纳入综述中的证据质量。结果以叙述性综述的形式呈现。
我们在本综述中纳入了八项综述:五项Cochrane综述(33项纳入试验)和三项非Cochrane综述(11项纳入试验)。三项综述(均为Cochrane综述)在第二阶段的所有ROBIS领域中风险评分较低,总体偏倚风险较低。其余五项综述在第二阶段的第4领域风险评分较高,因为在综述结果和结论中未专门考虑和讨论“偏倚风险”评估。综述中纳入的试验在规模和偏倚风险方面各不相同。干预措施与常规治疗进行了比较。中等质量的证据表明,即时C反应蛋白(CRP)检测(风险比(RR)0.78,95%置信区间(CI)0.66至0.92,3284名参与者,6项试验)、共同决策(优势比(OR)0.44,95%CI 0.26至0.75,3274名参与者,3项试验;RR 0.64,95%CI 0.49至0.84,4623名参与者,2项试验;风险差 -18.44,95%CI -27.24至 -9.65,481,807名参与者,4项试验)以及降钙素原指导管理(调整后的OR 0.10,95%CI 0.07至0.14,1008名参与者,2项试验)可能会减少全科医疗中的抗生素处方。我们发现中等质量的证据表明,降钙素原指导管理可能会减少急诊科的抗生素处方(调整后的OR 0.34,95%CI 0.28至0.43,2605名参与者,7项试验)。这些干预措施的总体效果较小(很少有干预措施能使抗生素处方减少超过50%,大多数约为四分之一或更少),但可能具有临床重要性。与常规治疗相比,共同决策可能对同一种疾病的再次就诊影响很小或没有影响(RR 0.87,95%CI 0.74至1.03,1860名参与者,4项试验,中等质量证据),并且可能对患者满意度影响很小或没有影响(RR 0.86,95%CI 0.57至1.30,1110名参与者,2项试验,低质量证据)。同样,CRP检测可能对患者满意度(RR 0.79,95%CI 0.57至1.08,689名参与者,2项试验,中等质量证据)或再次就诊(RR 1.08,95%CI 0.93至1.27,5132名参与者,4项试验,中等质量证据)影响很小或没有影响。与常规护理相比,降钙素原指导管理在全科医疗中可能对治疗失败影响很小或没有影响(调整后的OR 0.95,95%CI 0.73至1.24,1008名参与者,2项试验,中等质量证据),然而与常规治疗相比,它可能会减少急诊科的治疗失败(调整后的OR 0.76,95%CI 0.61至0.95,2605名参与者,7项试验,中等质量证据)。针对基层医疗中减少抗生素处方的临床医生教育材料和决策支持干预措施的证据质量为低或非常低(未报告汇总结果),试验结果高度异质性,因此我们无法得出这些干预措施效果的结论。在急诊科使用快速病毒诊断可能对抗生素处方影响很小或没有影响(RR 0.86,95%CI 0.61至1.22,891名参与者,3项试验,低质量证据),并且可能对再次就诊影响很小或没有影响(RR 0.86,95%CI 0.59至1.25,200名参与者,1项试验,低质量证据)。纳入综述的试验中没有一项报告ARI治疗或任何相关并发症的管理成本。
我们发现证据表明,CRP检测、共同决策和降钙素原指导管理可减少基层医疗中ARI患者的抗生素处方。因此,这些干预措施可能会减少总体抗生素消耗,从而降低抗生素耐药性。这些干预措施似乎对患者满意度和再次就诊结果没有负面影响,尽管试验中对这些结果的测量有限。这一点应在未来试验中加以纠正。我们无法获取有关管理成本的信息,这与测量的匮乏意味着难以权衡在实践中实施这些干预措施的利弊。这项研究大多在高收入国家进行,可能不适用于其他环境。针对患者和临床医生的教育材料和工具干预措施的证据质量为低或非常低,这使我们无法得出任何结论。需要高质量的试验来进一步研究这些干预措施。