School of Primary Care, Population Sciences and Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
Department of Health Science, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Br J Gen Pract. 2023 Feb 23;73(728):e196-e203. doi: 10.3399/BJGP.2022.0229. Print 2023 Mar.
There is a lack of evidence regarding post-consultation symptom trajectories for patients with respiratory tract infections (RTIs) and whether patient characteristics can be used to predict illness duration.
To describe symptom trajectories in patients with RTIs, and assess baseline characteristics and adverse events associated with trajectories.
The study included data about 9103 adults and children from 12 primary care studies.
A latent class-informed regression analysis of individual patient data from randomised controlled trials and observational cohort studies was undertaken. Post-consultation symptom trajectory (severity and duration), re-consultation with same or worsening illness, and admission to hospital were assessed.
In total, 90% of participants recovered from all symptoms by 28 days, regardless of antibiotic prescribing strategy (none, immediate, and delayed antibiotics). For studies of RTI with cough as a dominant symptom ( = 5314), four trajectories were identified: 'rapid (6 days)' (90% of participants recovered within 6 days) in 52.0%; 'intermediate (10 days)' (28.9%); 'slow progressive improvement (27 days)' (12.5%); and 'slow improvement with initial high symptom burden (27 days)' (6.6%). For cough, being aged 16-64 years (odds ratio [OR] 2.57, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.72 to 3.85 compared with <16 years), higher presenting illness baseline severity (OR 1.51, 95% CI = 1.12 to 2.03), presence of lung disease (OR 1.78, 95% CI = 1.44 to 2.21), and median and above illness duration before consultation (≥7 days) (OR 1.99, 95% CI = 1.68 to 2.37) were associated with slower recovery (>10 days) compared with faster recovery (≤10 days). Re-consultations and admissions to hospital for cough were higher in those with slower recovery (ORs: 2.15, 95% CI = 1.78 to 2.60 and 7.42, 95% CI = 3.49 to 15.78, respectively).
Older patients presenting with more severe, longer pre-consultation symptoms and chronic lung disease should be advised they are more likely to experience longer post-consultation illness durations, and that recovery rates are similar with and without antibiotics.
目前缺乏关于呼吸道感染(RTI)患者就诊后症状轨迹的证据,也不清楚患者特征是否可以用来预测疾病持续时间。
描述 RTI 患者的症状轨迹,并评估与轨迹相关的基线特征和不良事件。
该研究纳入了来自 12 项初级保健研究的 9103 名成人和儿童的数据。
对随机对照试验和观察性队列研究的个体患者数据进行潜在类别信息回归分析。评估就诊后症状轨迹(严重程度和持续时间)、同一疾病再次就诊和病情恶化、以及住院情况。
无论抗生素的使用策略(不使用、即刻使用和延迟使用抗生素)如何,90%的参与者在 28 天内所有症状均痊愈。对于以咳嗽为主要症状的 RTI 研究(=5314),确定了 4 种轨迹:“快速(6 天)”(90%的参与者在 6 天内痊愈)占 52.0%;“中等(10 天)”占 28.9%;“缓慢进展性改善(27 天)”占 12.5%;“初始高症状负担下缓慢改善(27 天)”占 6.6%。对于咳嗽,年龄在 16-64 岁(比值比 [OR] 2.57,95%置信区间 [CI] 1.72 至 3.85 与<16 岁相比)、就诊前疾病基线严重程度较高(OR 1.51,95%CI 1.12 至 2.03)、患有肺部疾病(OR 1.78,95%CI 1.44 至 2.21)以及就诊前疾病持续时间中位数及以上(≥7 天)(OR 1.99,95%CI 1.68 至 2.37)与较快恢复(≤10 天)相比,与较慢恢复(>10 天)相关。与较快恢复相比,较慢恢复者咳嗽再次就诊和住院的几率更高(比值比 [ORs]:2.15,95%CI 1.78 至 2.60 和 7.42,95%CI 3.49 至 15.78)。
年龄较大、就诊前症状更严重、持续时间更长且患有慢性肺部疾病的患者,应告知他们更有可能经历较长的就诊后疾病持续时间,并且无论是否使用抗生素,恢复速度相似。