Bhate Ketaki, Lin Liang-Yu, Barbieri John S, Leyrat Clémence, Hopkins Susan, Stabler Richard, Shallcross Laura, Smeeth Liam, Francis Nick, Mathur Rohini, Langan Sinéad M, Sinnott Sarah-Jo
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BJGP Open. 2021 Jun 30;5(3). doi: 10.3399/BJGPO.2020.0181. Print 2021 Jun.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global health priority. Acne vulgaris is a common skin condition for which antibiotic use ranges from a few months to years of daily exposure.
To systemically search for and synthesise evidence on the risk of treatment-resistant infections, and other evidence of AMR, following long-term oral antibiotic use for acne.
DESIGN & SETTING: In this systematic review, a literature search was carried out using the databases Embase, MEDLINE, Cochrane, and Web of Science. They were searched using MeSH, Emtree, or other relevant terms, and followed a pre-registered protocol.
Search strategies were developed with a librarian and undertaken in July 2019. All searches date from database inception. The primary outcome was antibiotic treatment failure or infection caused by a resistant organism. Secondary outcomes included detection of resistant organisms without an infection, rate of infection, or changes to flora.
A total of 6996 records were identified. Seventy-three full-text articles were shortlisted for full review, of which five were included. Two investigated rates of infection, and three resistance or changes to microbial flora. Three studies had 35 or fewer participants (range 20-118 496). Three studies had a serious or high risk of bias, one moderate, and one a low risk of bias. Weak evidence was found for an association between antibiotic use for acne and subsequent increased rates of upper respiratory tract infections and pharyngitis.
There is a lack of high quality evidence on the relationship between oral antibiotics for acne treatment and subsequent AMR sequelae. This needs to be urgently addressed with rigorously conducted studies.
抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)是全球卫生重点问题。寻常痤疮是一种常见的皮肤疾病,治疗中抗生素的使用时长从数月到数年不等,患者需每日用药。
系统检索并综合长期口服抗生素治疗痤疮后出现治疗抵抗性感染风险及其他抗菌药物耐药性证据。
在本系统评价中,使用Embase、MEDLINE、Cochrane和Web of Science数据库进行文献检索。检索使用医学主题词(MeSH)、Emtree或其他相关术语,并遵循预先注册的方案。
与一名图书馆员共同制定检索策略,并于2019年7月进行检索。所有检索均从数据库建立之初开始。主要结局是抗生素治疗失败或由耐药菌引起的感染。次要结局包括未发生感染时耐药菌的检测、感染率或菌群变化。
共识别出6996条记录。73篇全文文章入围进行全面审查,其中5篇被纳入。2篇研究了感染率,3篇研究了耐药性或微生物菌群变化。3项研究的参与者为35名或更少(范围为20 - 118496)。3项研究存在严重或高偏倚风险,1项为中度风险,1项为低偏倚风险。有微弱证据表明痤疮使用抗生素与随后上呼吸道感染和咽炎发病率增加之间存在关联。
关于痤疮治疗口服抗生素与随后抗菌药物耐药性后遗症之间的关系,缺乏高质量证据。这一问题亟待通过严格开展的研究加以解决。