Löffler Christin, Böhmer Femke
Institute of General Practice, Rostock University Medical Center, Rostock, Germany.
PLoS One. 2017 Nov 14;12(11):e0188061. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188061. eCollection 2017.
Abundant evidence in dentistry suggests that antibiotics are prescribed despite the existence of guidelines aiming to reduce the development of antibiotic resistance. This review investigated (1) which type of interventions aiming to optimise prescription of antibiotics exist in dentistry, (2) the effect of these interventions and (3) the specific strengths and limitations of the studies reporting on these interventions.
Literature search was based on Medline, Embase, Global Health, Cochrane CENTRAL, ClinicalTrials.gov and Current Controlled Trials. Studies with one of the two primary outcomes were included: (1) The number of antibiotics prescribed and/or (2) the accuracy of the prescription, commonly measured as a percentage of adherence to local clinical guidelines.
Nine studies met these inclusion criteria. Five studies reported on the prescription of antibiotics in primary dental care and four studies focused on outpatient dental care. Interventions used in primary dental care included a combination of audit, feedback, education, local consensus, dissemination of guidelines and/or academic detailing. Trials in the outpatient setting made use of expert panel discussions, educational feedback on previous acts of prescribing, the dissemination of guidelines and the establishment of internal guidelines. All studies successfully reduced the number of antibiotics prescribed and/or increased the accuracy of the prescription. However, most studies were confounded by a high risk of selection bias, selective outcome reporting and high variance across study groups. In particular, information relating to study design and methodology was insufficient. Only three studies related the prescriptions to the number of patients treated with antibiotics.
This systematic review was able to offer conclusions which took the limitations of the investigated studies into account. Unfortunately, few studies could be included and many of these studies were confounded by a low quality of scientific reporting and lack of information regarding study methodology. High-quality research with objective and standardised outcome reporting, longer periods of follow-up, rigorous methodology and adequate standard of study reporting is urgently needed.
牙科领域有大量证据表明,尽管存在旨在减少抗生素耐药性产生的指南,但抗生素仍被开具处方。本综述调查了:(1)牙科领域存在哪些旨在优化抗生素处方的干预措施;(2)这些干预措施的效果;(3)报告这些干预措施的研究的具体优势和局限性。
文献检索基于医学文献数据库(Medline)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)、全球健康数据库、考克兰系统评价数据库(Cochrane CENTRAL)、临床试验数据库(ClinicalTrials.gov)和当前对照试验数据库。纳入具有以下两个主要结局之一的研究:(1)开具的抗生素数量;和/或(2)处方的准确性,通常以遵循当地临床指南的百分比来衡量。
九项研究符合这些纳入标准。五项研究报告了初级牙科保健中抗生素的处方情况,四项研究聚焦于门诊牙科保健。初级牙科保健中使用的干预措施包括审核、反馈、教育、地方共识、指南传播和/或学术详述的组合。门诊环境中的试验采用了专家小组讨论、对既往处方行为的教育反馈、指南传播以及内部指南的制定。所有研究均成功减少了开具的抗生素数量和/或提高了处方的准确性。然而,大多数研究因存在选择偏倚、选择性结果报告以及研究组间差异较大的高风险而受到混淆。特别是,与研究设计和方法相关的信息不足。只有三项研究将处方与接受抗生素治疗的患者数量相关联。
本系统综述能够得出考虑到所调查研究局限性的结论。遗憾的是,纳入的研究较少,且其中许多研究因科学报告质量低以及缺乏关于研究方法的信息而受到混淆。迫切需要高质量的研究,要有客观和标准化的结果报告、更长的随访期、严谨的方法以及充分的研究报告标准。