Buonsenso Danilo, Sodero Giorgio, Mariani Francesco, Lazzareschi Ilaria, Proli Francesco, Zampino Giuseppe, Pierantoni Luca, Valentini Piero, Rendeli Claudia
Department of Woman and Child Health and Public Health, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS, 00168 Rome, Italy.
Centro di Salute Globale, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 00168 Rome, Italy.
Children (Basel). 2022 Oct 28;9(11):1647. doi: 10.3390/children9111647.
Introduction: There is marked heterogeneity in clinicians’ choice of antibiotic duration for pediatric urinary tract infections (UTIs). Most patients with bacterial UTIs still receive between 7 and 10 days of antibiotics. Prolonged antibiotic exposure drives the emergence of resistance and increases the occurrence of adverse effects. There is increasing evidence that shorter antibiotic regimens may be equally effective compared with longer ones. However, studies evaluating shorter therapies in children hospitalized with urinary tract infections have not yet been performed. Methods: We performed a retrospective study comparing children hospitalized with UTIs treated with a short antibiotic (<7 days) or standard antibiotic treatment. The primary aim of our study was to assess the efficacy of a shorter antibiotic therapy for children with UTIs, compared with an historical group of children treated with a standard 7−14 days course. Results: 112 patients, 46 of which were females (41.1%) with a median age 6 months were enrolled. A total of 33 patients (29.5%) underwent a short therapy. All patients were successfully discharged from the acute episode, independently from antibiotic duration. Short therapy was associated with a lower risk of urinary tract relapse (22 relapses (95.6%) in the standard group, 1 (4.4%) in the short group; OR 0.081; 95%CI 0.01−0.63). Conclusions: Short antibiotic therapy was equivalent to standard duration therapy for the cure of UTIs in hospitalized children and was also associated with a lower rate of recurrences. This study provides the basis for a larger prospective randomized study to address the role of short antibiotic therapies in children with UTIs requiring hospitalization
临床医生在选择小儿尿路感染(UTIs)抗生素疗程方面存在显著异质性。大多数细菌性UTIs患者仍接受7至10天的抗生素治疗。长时间使用抗生素会促使耐药性出现,并增加不良反应的发生率。越来越多的证据表明,与较长疗程相比,较短的抗生素疗程可能同样有效。然而,尚未开展针对住院尿路感染患儿较短疗程治疗的评估研究。方法:我们进行了一项回顾性研究,比较接受短疗程抗生素治疗(<7天)或标准抗生素治疗的住院UTIs患儿。我们研究的主要目的是评估与接受标准7 - 14天疗程治疗的历史队列患儿相比,较短抗生素疗程治疗UTIs患儿的疗效。结果:共纳入112例患者,其中46例为女性(41.1%),中位年龄为6个月。共有33例患者(29.5%)接受了短疗程治疗。所有患者均成功度过急性期出院,与抗生素疗程无关。短疗程治疗与较低的尿路感染复发风险相关(标准组22例复发(95.6%),短疗程组1例复发(4.4%);OR 0.081;95%CI 0.01 - 0.63)。结论:短疗程抗生素治疗与标准疗程治疗在治愈住院患儿UTIs方面等效,且复发率较低。本研究为开展更大规模的前瞻性随机研究奠定了基础,以探讨短疗程抗生素治疗在需要住院的UTIs患儿中的作用