Eastep Tyler G, Kendsersky Rebecca M, Zook Jessica, Moore Astrela
Department of Pharmacy (TGE, RMK, JZ, AM), Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther. 2023;28(6):519-523. doi: 10.5863/1551-6776-28.6.519. Epub 2023 Oct 28.
Patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) are at increased risk for invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) caused by . Immunization and antimicrobial prophylaxis may prevent this complication, and landmark clinical trials support discontinuation of antimicrobial prophylaxis at age 5 years. However, antimicrobial prophylaxis continues in some patients indefinitely. The objective of this study was to evaluate the incidence of culture-positive IPD and other infections in the setting of penicillin prophylaxis in the pediatric SCD population.
This was a single-center, retrospective cohort study of patients with SCD who continued antimicrobial prophylaxis with penicillin, compared with those whose antimicrobial prophylaxis was discontinued. Included patients were aged 5 to 18 years during the study period and had no history of IPD or surgical splenectomy. Patient charts were reviewed for demographics, immunizations, penicillin prescription history, and microbiologic culture data.
Antimicrobial prophylaxis continued beyond age 5 years in 65% of patients, a higher percentage of whom had hemoglobin SS or S beta-zero disease. No patients whose antimicrobial prophylaxis was discontinued experienced IPD; 1 patient who continued antimicrobial prophylaxis died of sepsis. Rates of other infections were comparable between groups (21% in prophylaxis versus 18% in no prophylaxis).
These results support appropriate de-prescribing of antimicrobial prophylaxis in patients with SCD who are not at high risk for IPD. Further multicenter studies are needed to evaluate consequences of antimicrobial prophylaxis with alternative agents on antibiotic resistance, examine provider rationale for continuation of antimicrobial prophylaxis, and assess quality of life effects (e.g., medication adherence, adverse drug reactions) of antimicrobial prophylaxis.
镰状细胞病(SCD)患者罹患由[病原体未提及]引起的侵袭性肺炎球菌疾病(IPD)的风险增加。免疫接种和抗菌药物预防可预防这一并发症,且具有里程碑意义的临床试验支持在5岁时停止抗菌药物预防。然而,一些患者仍无限期地继续进行抗菌药物预防。本研究的目的是评估在儿科SCD人群中进行青霉素预防的情况下,培养阳性IPD和其他感染的发生率。
这是一项单中心回顾性队列研究,将继续使用青霉素进行抗菌药物预防的SCD患者与停止抗菌药物预防的患者进行比较。纳入的患者在研究期间年龄为5至18岁,且无IPD或外科脾切除术病史。查阅患者病历以获取人口统计学、免疫接种、青霉素处方史和微生物培养数据。
65%的患者在5岁后仍继续进行抗菌药物预防,其中血红蛋白SS型或Sβ0型疾病的患者比例更高。停止抗菌药物预防的患者中没有发生IPD;1例继续进行抗菌药物预防的患者死于败血症。两组之间其他感染的发生率相当(预防组为21%,未预防组为18%)。
这些结果支持对IPD低风险的SCD患者适当停用抗菌药物预防。需要进一步的多中心研究来评估使用替代药物进行抗菌药物预防对抗生素耐药性的影响,检查提供者继续进行抗菌药物预防的理由,并评估抗菌药物预防对生活质量的影响(如药物依从性、药物不良反应)。