| Literature DB >> 12181082 |
Nicole Le Saux1, Andrew Howard, Nicholas J Barrowman, Isabelle Gaboury, Margaret Sampson, David Moher.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis (AHO) occurs primarily in children and is believed to evolve from bacteremia followed by localization of infection to the metaphysis of bones. Currently, there is no consensus on the route and duration of antimicrobial therapy to treat AHO.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12181082 PMCID: PMC128824 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-2-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Flow diagram outlining the results of literature search and review of studies retrieved.
*Kaplan [38] is not included in the analysis because it is methodologically dissimilar from the other cohorts
Studies which were excluded and the principle reason for exclusion
| Study | Reason For Exclusion |
| Unkila-Kallio 1993 | Mainly epidemiologic data. Appears to be the cohort from which Peltola 1997 is drawn. |
| Dones 1994 | Small prospective cohort of 4 patients evaluating teicoplanin. |
| Nelson 1982 | Study addressed bactericidal titers. Follow-up did not extend to 6 months although reported cure rate was 95% with an average duration of 5 days of intravenous antimicrobials. |
| Beauvais 1981 | Addressed the use of pristinamycin orally. Data was not usable because group could not be reliably separated for route and type of antimicrobial. |
| Fleming 1970 | No follow-up data available. Trial focussed on microbiology and side effects of treatment. |
| Nussinovitch 1997 | Data on osteomyelitis cases alone could not be extracted. Maximum follow-up was about 4 months. Cure appeared to be 95% with mean duration of IV antibiotics of 13.7 days. |
| Walker 1973 | Follow-up was 4 months. Mean duration of intravenous antimicrobials in 14 children was 4.21 days (range 2–21 days) and cure was 100%. |
| Bandelon 1988 | Group of osteomyelitis and septic arthritis could not be separated with respect to length of therapy or etiology. |
| Kulhanjianv 1989 | Only 3 cases of osteomyelitis due to |
| Aronoff 1986 | Of 9 children only 1 child had osteomyelitis alone. No follow-up. |
| Learmonth 1984 | Combined patients with septic arthritis and osteomyelitis. Could not extract data with respect to |
Description of studies and the associated cure rates
| Author | Publication year | Sample size1 | Parenteral (IV) antimicrobial | Days of IV | Oral | Days of oral | Cure rate % (CI) | |
| Long Course | ||||||||
| Kolyvas2 | 1980 | 5 | 50.03 | Cephradine +/- | 28 (28–28) | Cephradine or | 18 (14–35) | 100 |
| Tetzlaff | 1978 | 18 | 100.0 | Methicillin or | 8 (7–13) | Cephalexin or | 20 (13–42) | 94 |
| Bryson | 1979 | 18 | 100.0 | Oxacillin or | 7 (5–14) | Dicloxacillin | N/A (28–56) | 100 |
| Rodriguez | 1977 | 21 | 90.5 | Clindamycin4 | 25 (21–28) | Clindamycin | 42 (42–42) | 100 |
| Prober | 1979 | 22 | 100.0 | Nafcillin or | 145 (4–28) | Dicloxacillin | 283 (N/A) | 100 |
| Short Course | ||||||||
| Kolyvas2 | 1980 | 5 | 50.03 | 3 (N/A) | Cephradine or | 423 (39–60)3 | 100 | |
| Refass6 | 1989 | 6 | 98.9 | Cloxacillin | N/A (5–6) | Flucloxacillin | N/A (7–200)3 | 100 |
| Freij | 1987 | 8 | 100.0 | Imipenem + | 5.5 (4–9) | Cefaclor or | 15 (13–19) | 88 |
| Feigin7 | 1975 | 11 | 72.7 | Clindamycin | 6 (3–13) | Clindamycin | 425 (N/A) | 91 |
| Geddes8 | 1977 | 18 | 65.03 | Clindamycin | 63 (N/A) | Clindamycin | 903(N/A) | 94 |
| Cole9 | 1982 | 48 | 94.5 | Cloxacillin or | 3 (2–5) | Cloxacillin or | 39 (37–40) | 92 |
| Peltola | 1997 | 50 | 100.0 | Cephradine or | 4 (4–6) | Cefadroxil or | 19 (17–19) | 100 |
1 Includes cases that were due to Staphylococcus aureus and those who were culture negative 2 Included only the cases that had osteomyelitis alone or had contiguous arthritis and osteomyelitis. 3 Estimated value. 4 Clindamycin is the only macrolide studied – all other antimicrobials mentioned are beta-lactams. 5 Median reported. 6 Only the 6 patients who clearly met the diagnostic criteria were included. 7 Data abstracted from the 11 cases of osteomyelitis (8 of whom had S. aureus). 8 Only data for the 18 children with acute osteomyelitis from the study were included. Some of these may only have received oral medication. 9 Data from the 48 patients for whom there was follow-up of greater than 6 months.
Figure 2Cure rate versus the duration of parenteral antimicrobial therapy Long-term parenteral antimicrobials is defined as greater than or equal to 7 days. Short-term parenteral antimicrobials is defined as less than 7 days