Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Paediatric Infectious Diseases Research Group, St George's University of London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2017 Sep 27;7(9):e016363. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016363.
Inaccurate antibiotic dosing can lead to treatment failure, fuel antimicrobial resistance and increase side effects. The British National Formulary for Children (BNFC) guidance recommends oral antibiotic dosing according to age bands as a proxy for weight. Recommended doses of amoxicillin for children were increased in 2014 'after widespread concerns of under dosing'. However, the impact of dose changes on British children of different weights is unknown, particularly given the rising prevalence of childhood obesity in the UK. We aimed to estimate the accuracy of oral amoxicillin dosing in British children before and after the revised BNFC guidance in 2014.
We used data on age and weights for 1556 British children (aged 2-18 years) from a nationally representative cross-sectional survey, the Health Survey for England 2013.
We calculated the doses each child would receive using the BNFC age band guidance, before and after the 2014 changes, against the 'gold standard' weight-based dose of amoxicillin, as per its summary of product characteristics.
Assuming children of different weights were equally likely to receive antibiotics, we calculated the percentage of the children who would be at risk of misdosing by the BNFC age bands.
Before 2014, 54.6% of children receiving oral amoxicillin would have been underdosed and no child would have received more than the recommended dose. After the BNFC guidance changed in 2014, the number of children estimated as underdosed dropped to 5.8%, but 0.5% of the children would have received too high a dose.
Changes to the BNFC age-banded amoxicillin doses in 2014 have significantly reduced the proportion of children who are likely to be underdosed, with only a minimal rise in the number of those above the recommended range.
不准确的抗生素剂量可能导致治疗失败、助长抗菌药物耐药性并增加副作用。《英国儿童国家处方集》(BNFC)指南建议根据年龄组而非体重来估算口服抗生素剂量。2014 年,由于“普遍存在剂量不足的担忧”,儿童阿莫西林的推荐剂量有所增加。然而,剂量变化对英国不同体重儿童的影响尚不清楚,尤其是考虑到英国儿童肥胖症的发病率不断上升。我们旨在评估 2014 年修订后的 BNFC 指南前后,英国儿童口服阿莫西林剂量的准确性。
我们使用了来自英国全国代表性横断面调查(2013 年英格兰健康调查)的 1556 名英国儿童(年龄 2-18 岁)的年龄和体重数据。
我们使用 BNFC 年龄组指南计算了每个孩子在 2014 年变化前后的剂量,然后根据其产品特征摘要计算了阿莫西林的“金标准”基于体重的剂量,以计算每个孩子的剂量。
假设不同体重的儿童接受抗生素的可能性相同,我们计算了 BNFC 年龄组的儿童可能存在用药错误的百分比。
在 2014 年之前,接受口服阿莫西林的儿童中有 54.6%可能存在剂量不足,而且没有儿童会服用超过推荐剂量。在 2014 年 BNFC 指南改变后,估计剂量不足的儿童数量下降到 5.8%,但有 0.5%的儿童可能会服用过高剂量。
2014 年 BNFC 年龄分组阿莫西林剂量的变化显著降低了可能剂量不足的儿童比例,只有极少数儿童的剂量超过推荐范围。