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Treatment of acute cough/lower respiratory tract infection by antibiotic class and associated outcomes: a 13 European country observational study in primary care

Butler, Christopher C (författare)
Cardiff University
Kelly, Mark J (författare)
Cardiff University
Goossens, Herman (författare)
University of Antwerp
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Verheij, Theo (författare)
University Medical Centre Utrecht
Little, Paul (författare)
University of Southampton
Melbye, Hasse (författare)
University of Tromso
Torres, Antoni (författare)
University of Barcelona
Mölstad, Sigvard (författare)
Linköpings universitet,Allmänmedicin,Hälsouniversitetet
Godycki-Cwirko, Maciek (författare)
Medical University Lodz
Almirall, Jordi (författare)
Hospital Mataro
Blasi, Francesco (författare)
University of Milan
Schaberg, Tom (författare)
Deaconess Hospital Rotenburg
Edwards, Peter (författare)
Ely Bridge Surg, Cardiff
Rautakorpi, Ulla-Maija (författare)
Tampere Off
Hupkova, Helena (författare)
Comenius University
Wood, Joseph (författare)
Cardiff University
Nuttall, Jacqui (författare)
Cardiff University
Coenen, Samuel (författare)
University of Antwerp
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 (creator_code:org_t)
2010-09-18
2010
Engelska.
Ingår i: JOURNAL OF ANTIMICROBIAL CHEMOTHERAPY. - : Oxford University Press. - 0305-7453 .- 1460-2091. ; 65:11, s. 2472-2478
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)
Abstract Ämnesord
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  • Acute cough/lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) is one of the commonest reasons for consulting and antibiotic prescribing. There are theoretical reasons why treatment with particular antibiotic classes may aid recovery more than others, but empirical, pragmatic evidence is lacking. We investigated whether treatment with a particular antibiotic class (amoxicillin) was more strongly associated with symptom score resolution and time to patients reporting recovery than each of eight other antibiotic classes or no antibiotic treatment for acute cough/LRTI. Clinicians recorded history, examination findings, symptom severity and antibiotic treatment for 3402 patients in a 13 country prospective observational study of adults presenting in 14 primary care research networks with acute cough/LRTI. 2714 patients completed a symptom score daily for up to 28 days and recorded the day on which they felt recovered. A three-level autoregressive moving average model (1,1) model investigated logged daily symptom scores to analyse symptom resolution. A two-level survival model analysed time to reported recovery. Clinical presentation was controlled for using clinician-recorded symptoms, sputum colour, temperature, age, co-morbidities, smoking status and duration of illness prior to consultation. Compared with amoxicillin, no antibiotic class (and no antibiotic treatment) was associated with clinically relevant improved symptom resolution (all coefficients in the range -0.02 to 0.01 and all P values greater than 0.12). No antibiotic class (and no antibiotic treatment) was associated with faster time to recovery than amoxicillin. Treatment by antibiotic class was not associated with symptom resolution or time to recovery in adults presenting to primary care with acute cough/LRTI.

Nyckelord

antibiotic resistance
patient outcome
clinical epidemiology
antibiotic choice
MEDICINE
MEDICIN

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