| Literature DB >> 20862492 |
Abstract
Many countries now have guidelines on the clinical management of acute otitis media. In almost all, the public health goal of containing acquired resistance in bacteria through reduced antibiotic prescribing is the main aim and basis for recommendations. Despite some partial short-term successes, clinical activity databases and opinion surveys suggest that such restrictive guidelines are not followed closely, so this aim is not achieved. Radical new solutions are needed to tackle irrationalities in healthcare systems which set the short-term physician-patient relationship against long-term public health. Resolving this opposition will require comprehensive policy appraisal and co-ordinated actions at many levels, not just dissemination of evidence and promotion of guidelines. The inappropriate clinical rationales that underpin non-compliance with guidelines can be questioned by evidence, but also need specific developments promoting alternative solutions, within a framework of whole-system thinking. Promising developments would be (a) physician training modules on age-appropriate analgesia and on detection plus referral of rare complications like mastoiditis, and (b) vaccination against the most common and serious bacterial pathogens.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20862492 PMCID: PMC3068524 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-010-1286-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Fig. 1Trends between 1999 and 2007 in penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae by country. Reproduced with permission from European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System Annual report 2007 [29]. Available at: http://www.earss.rivm.nl. Data retrieved February 2009. Each bar represents the findings from a single year. The arrows indicate the significant trends observed for all resistant strains (black arrows) or fully penicillin-resistant strains (red arrows). The stars indicate significant trends in the overall national data that were, non-significantly, supported by data from laboratories reporting all 9 years. IE Ireland, IL Israel, IT Italy, BE Belgium, NL Netherlands, DK Denmark, FI Finland, FR France, DE Germany, ES Spain, SE Sweden, UK United Kingdom
Examples of national guidelines in AOM: scope and recommended first-line treatment
| Guideline | Scope | First-line treatment |
|---|---|---|
| American Academy of Pediatrics and American | Pain management, initial observation versus antibacterial treatment, appropriate choices of antibacterials, and preventive measures | Analgesia |
| Academy of Family Physicians (AAP/AAFP 2004) [ | Following certain diagnosis | |
| <2 years: antibiotics; | ||
| >2 years; watchful waiting | ||
| Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN 2003) [ | Detection, management, referral and follow-up of AOM and OM with effusion | Analgesia first-line |
| Delayed antibiotic treatment after 72 h | ||
| National Institute of Clinical Excellence, UK (NICE 2008) [ | Clinical effectiveness and cost effectiveness of antibiotic management strategies for respiratory tract infections | AOM—no antibiotic or delayed antibiotics |
| And/or antibiotics for severe cases | ||
| Bilateral AOM in children younger than 2 years | ||
| AOM in children with otorrhoea | ||
| Agence Française de Sécurité Sanitaire des Produits de Santé (AFSSAPS 2005) [ | Best use of antibiotics for respiratory tract infection | <2 years: antibiotics |
| >2 years: watchful waiting unless symptoms are severe then use antibiotics | ||
| And/or delayed treatment after re-evaluation at 48–72 h | ||
| Ontario Guidelines Advisory Committee 2002 [ | Antibiotic treatment in OM | For purulent OM with effusion or minimally symptomatic AOM |
| Amoxicillin prescription to be filled within a week at the parent’s discretion, if symptoms are worsening | ||
| Or deferred treatment following phone call to physician | ||
| Guidelines of the German society for pediatric infectious diseases [ | Treatment of AOM | Symptomatic treatment (analgesia, nose drops) and watchful waiting for 24–72 h if second look is assured. Antibiotics first line (amoxicillin) in severe disease, age < 6 months, risk factors |
| Nederlands Huisarts Genootschap (NHG) [ | Treatment of AOM | Analgesia (paracetamol) |
| In case of worsening disease or children <2 year with bilateral acute OM: amoxicillin for 1 week (recommended alternatives azithromycin for 3 days or cotrimoxazole for 5–7 days) | ||
| Spanish Pediatric Association [ | Treatment of AOM | Symptomatic treatment (paracetamol, ibuprofen) |
| Children >2 years without poor prognostic factors, analgesic with reassessment after 48 h | ||
| Antibiotic is recommended treatment for: | ||
| Mild or moderate condition: amoxicillin, then amoxicillin-clavulanate (if clinical failure at 48–72 h of treatment) | ||
| Severe conditions or less than 6 months: amoxicillin-clavulanate then if clinical failure at 48–72 h of treatment, tympanocentesis and treatment according to results of Gram staining and antibiotic sensitivity | ||
| Previous treatment failure (lack of clinical response): | ||
| amoxicillin-clavulanate then ceftriaxone, then tympanocentesis and treatment, according to Gram stain, culture, and sensitivity |
Fig. 2Vicious seven-stage spiral of antibiotic resistance in a core transmission group of preschoolers illustrated in the contrast between France and Germany. The boxes indicate forces which would exist without the spiral but which help to drive it