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The effect of amoxicillin in adult patients presenting to primary care with acute cough predicted to have pneumonia or a combined viral-bacterial infection

The effect of amoxicillin in adult patients presenting to primary care with acute cough predicted to have pneumonia or a combined viral-bacterial infection
The effect of amoxicillin in adult patients presenting to primary care with acute cough predicted to have pneumonia or a combined viral-bacterial infection

While most cases of acute cough are self-limiting, antibiotics are prescribed to over 50%. This proportion is inappropriately high given that benefit from treatment with amoxicillin could only be demonstrated in adults with pneumonia (based on chest radiograph) or combined viral–bacterial infection (based on modern microbiological methodology). As routine use of chest radiographs and microbiological testing is costly, clinical prediction rules could be used to identify these patient subsets. In this secondary analysis of data from a multicentre randomised controlled trial in adults presenting to primary care with acute cough, we used prediction rules for pneumonia or combined infection and assessed the effect of amoxicillin in patients predicted to have pneumonia or combined infection on symptom duration, symptom severity and illness deterioration. In total, 2056 patients that fulfilled all inclusion criteria were randomised, 1035 to amoxicillin, 1021 to placebo. Neither patients with a predicted pneumonia nor patients with a predicted combined infection were significantly more likely to benefit from amoxicillin. While the studied clinical prediction rules may help primary care clinicians to reduce antibiotic prescribing for low-risk patients, they did not identify adult acute cough patients that would benefit from amoxicillin treatment.

Adults, Amoxicillin, Benefit of treatment, Clinical prediction rule, Lower respiratory tract infection, Pneumonia, Primary care, Viral–bacterial infection
2079-6382
Bruyndonckx, Robin
f4de37c8-5255-4d22-936b-62a7c900c81a
Stuart, Beth
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Little, Paul
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Hens, Niel
e3027832-a075-49d4-a5e0-d9405e20ee11
Ieven, Margareta
c138048d-d838-4c8e-848d-a43e309f4cf0
Butler, Christopher C.
8bf4cace-c34a-4b65-838f-29c2be91e434
Verheij, Theo J.M.
0164f6e4-2c95-4233-8c2e-29b616c8ff66
Goossens, Herman
31f8e1ae-7da0-473c-bd49-f911c2187451
Coenen, Samuel
83e83064-aeea-4ded-9a3f-d0b2329a2f7b
Bruyndonckx, Robin
f4de37c8-5255-4d22-936b-62a7c900c81a
Stuart, Beth
626862fc-892b-4f6d-9cbb-7a8d7172b209
Little, Paul
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Hens, Niel
e3027832-a075-49d4-a5e0-d9405e20ee11
Ieven, Margareta
c138048d-d838-4c8e-848d-a43e309f4cf0
Butler, Christopher C.
8bf4cace-c34a-4b65-838f-29c2be91e434
Verheij, Theo J.M.
0164f6e4-2c95-4233-8c2e-29b616c8ff66
Goossens, Herman
31f8e1ae-7da0-473c-bd49-f911c2187451
Coenen, Samuel
83e83064-aeea-4ded-9a3f-d0b2329a2f7b

Bruyndonckx, Robin, Stuart, Beth, Little, Paul, Hens, Niel, Ieven, Margareta, Butler, Christopher C., Verheij, Theo J.M., Goossens, Herman and Coenen, Samuel (2021) The effect of amoxicillin in adult patients presenting to primary care with acute cough predicted to have pneumonia or a combined viral-bacterial infection. Antibiotics, 10 (7), [817]. (doi:10.3390/antibiotics10070817).

Record type: Article

Abstract

While most cases of acute cough are self-limiting, antibiotics are prescribed to over 50%. This proportion is inappropriately high given that benefit from treatment with amoxicillin could only be demonstrated in adults with pneumonia (based on chest radiograph) or combined viral–bacterial infection (based on modern microbiological methodology). As routine use of chest radiographs and microbiological testing is costly, clinical prediction rules could be used to identify these patient subsets. In this secondary analysis of data from a multicentre randomised controlled trial in adults presenting to primary care with acute cough, we used prediction rules for pneumonia or combined infection and assessed the effect of amoxicillin in patients predicted to have pneumonia or combined infection on symptom duration, symptom severity and illness deterioration. In total, 2056 patients that fulfilled all inclusion criteria were randomised, 1035 to amoxicillin, 1021 to placebo. Neither patients with a predicted pneumonia nor patients with a predicted combined infection were significantly more likely to benefit from amoxicillin. While the studied clinical prediction rules may help primary care clinicians to reduce antibiotic prescribing for low-risk patients, they did not identify adult acute cough patients that would benefit from amoxicillin treatment.

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Antiobiotics 1235927 manuscript proof checked - Accepted Manuscript
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Published date: 6 July 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: Funding: GRACE was funded by the European Commission’s Framework Programme 6 (LSHM-CT-2005-518226). R.B. is funded as a postdoctoral researcher by FWO Flanders (grant 12I6319N). The work was supported by the Methusalem financing program of the Flemish Government. N.H. acknowledges support from the University of Antwerp scientific chair in Evidence-Based Vaccinology, financed in 2009−2019 by a gift from Pfizer and in 2016–2020 from GSK. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Copyright: Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords: Adults, Amoxicillin, Benefit of treatment, Clinical prediction rule, Lower respiratory tract infection, Pneumonia, Primary care, Viral–bacterial infection

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 450737
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/450737
ISSN: 2079-6382
PURE UUID: e774e198-9ed9-4cba-8afd-0a084cc9e71c
ORCID for Beth Stuart: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5432-7437

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Date deposited: 09 Aug 2021 16:34
Last modified: 16 Apr 2024 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Robin Bruyndonckx
Author: Beth Stuart ORCID iD
Author: Paul Little
Author: Niel Hens
Author: Margareta Ieven
Author: Christopher C. Butler
Author: Theo J.M. Verheij
Author: Herman Goossens
Author: Samuel Coenen

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