Literature DB >> 25992781

An unsupported preference for intravenous antibiotics.

Ho Kwong Li1, Ambrose Agweyu2, Mike English3, Philip Bejon4.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25992781      PMCID: PMC4437896          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001825

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Med        ISSN: 1549-1277            Impact factor:   11.069


× No keyword cloud information.
Antibiotics that are well absorbed after oral administration are available, and the best current evidence suggests they are safe and effective for many conditions. Belief in the superiority of intravenous antibiotics is widespread among health professionals and patients, but it is not supported by good evidence. Expanding the evidence base will provide patients and clinicians with further reassurance in specific situations, but reasons for the belief in the strength of intravenous therapy also need to be understood and addressed. Trials expanding the evidence base might follow noninferiority designs, based on the precedent of widespread intravenous use. For many indications, the theoretical reasons for preferring intravenous therapy are not strong, and the risks of intravenous therapy are well established. It would be more logical for many indications to regard oral antibiotics as the default position and require trial designs to test the superiority of intravenous therapy. Clarity regarding the harms and benefits of intravenous antibiotics is needed. There is potential to change global clinical practice for the better, reducing health care costs and minimizing harm to patients.

Intravenous Antibiotic Use

Antibiotics given intravenously are commonly used in both high- and low-income countries. Available evidence from well-established antibiotic stewardship programmes in high-income settings suggests this is frequently unnecessary [1,2]. Data from low-income settings, though limited, demonstrate similar findings. An audit of therapeutic interventions in children with uncomplicated pneumonia in a Peruvian hospital found that 100% (n = 42) of subjects could have been treated with oral antibiotics [3]. Our own experience of admissions to paediatric wards in Kenya is that many children receive intravenous penicillin and large numbers of patients with malaria receive parenteral therapy despite clinical features suggesting that oral medication would be appropriate. Intravenous therapy may result in harmful complications such as phlebitis, extravasation injury, thrombosis, and local or systemic infection including bacteraemia. Intravenous therapy also prolongs the duration of inpatient stay, causing pain and inconvenience to the patient and financial cost to the health care system. The risk of bacteraemia in peripheral intravenous, peripherally inserted central, and central venous catheters can be as high as 0.1%, 2.4%, and 4.4%, respectively [4]. For higher-income countries, the combined risk is 0.2–2 bloodstream infections per 1,000 intravenous catheter days [5]. A significant risk of hospital-acquired infection has also been observed in lower-income countries [6]. The cost of prolonged inpatient stay for intravenous antibiotics is estimated at £4,500 per day. This expense and inconvenience can be reduced by outpatient intravenous antibiotic administration, but even outpatient intravenous treatment comes at a significant cost estimated at £1,800 via outpatient administration. Furthermore, in selecting an antibiotic suitable for once-daily dosing, clinicians may need to choose unnecessarily broad-spectrum agents [7].

Why Is Intravenous Therapy Needed?

An absolute requirement for parenteral antibiotics is present when patients cannot swallow or absorb oral antibiotics (for instance, during critical illness) or when intolerances or microbial susceptibility requires an agent that is effective if given intravenously but that would have poor oral bioavailability. These indications (e.g., meningitis and intensive care unit [ICU] admission) probably justify only a minority of current intravenous antibiotic prescriptions [1,2]. The more rapidly achieved peak antibiotic levels after intravenous dosing may be important when treating rapidly progressing infections such as severe sepsis and bacterial meningitis, as reflected in treatment guidelines and in the “surviving sepsis campaign” [8], although it has been shown that an early switch to oral antibiotics is safe in selected meningitis patients [9]. However, many clinicians and patients may infer from these guidelines that intravenous antibiotics are generally “stronger,” leading clinicians and patients to prefer intravenous antibiotics for other conditions. This belief may be further reinforced by guidelines that promote prereferral, injectable antibiotics for children with a “danger sign,” although many of them may be able to take oral medication [10], or by guidelines suggesting that prognostic signs associated with severe pneumonia in adults indicate the need for intravenous therapy [11,12]. The message implied is that serious illnesses require strong intravenous antibiotics. Aside from rapidly achieving peak levels, is there any other theoretical advantage of intravenous therapy? For the most commonly used antibiotics such as beta-lactams, glycopeptides, or macrolides, antimicrobial killing is not dependent on the peak levels but rather on the period of time during which antibiotic levels are above the minimum inhibitory concentration [13]. Even allowing for the higher doses that can be given intravenously, the time above minimum inhibitory concentration is similar for well-absorbed oral antibiotics compared with intravenous antibiotics. Exceptions to this rule are aminoglycosides and quinolones, in which antimicrobial killing is related to the peak concentrations achieved (however, aminoglycosides are not orally absorbed and quinolones are not used extensively by the intravenous route, so there is no obvious oral versus intravenous comparison within these classes). Well-absorbed oral antibiotics, such as amoxicillin, clindamycin and doxycycline, are available, with bioavailability at >75%, 90%, and >95%, respectively [14-16]. Many of these antibiotics achieve adequate concentrations in tissues such as prostate tissue or bone. The high cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations required for treating neurosyphillis may not be achieved with oral penicillins but may be achievable with other oral agents for which there are limited data on efficacy. Intravenous regimes might be thought to ensure adherence to treatment, although this could also be achieved by directly observed oral therapy. There is little theoretical basis for believing that intravenous antibiotics are simply “better” or “stronger” than oral antibiotics.

Randomized Controlled Trials

No large single randomized controlled trial (RCT) has demonstrated superiority in intravenous treatment, but a number of trials (many adopting the strategy of early oral switch) have demonstrated equivalence of oral versus intravenous antibiotic therapy, as illustrated by the following references. For childhood pneumonia, the leading cause of hospitalization and death in children globally, noninferiority of oral amoxicillin versus injectable penicillin has been studied in three large trials conducted in low-income countries [17-19] and one small study undertaken in the United Kingdom [20]. When pooled, these trials include over 4,000 children recruited across nine countries and show no difference in clinical treatment failure rates (pooled risk difference -0.01 95% CI -0.02 to 0.01, shown in Fig 1, which was taken from supplementary figure 2 of [19] using the search criteria as applied in S1 Fig in August 2014). The World Health Organisation guidelines have recently been revised to allow outpatient treatment with oral antibiotics for moderately severe pneumonia [10].
Fig 1

Forest plot for trials comparing treatment failure among children in low-income settings who were treated with amoxicillin or benzyl penicillin for severe pneumonia.

See supplementary figure 2 of [19].

Forest plot for trials comparing treatment failure among children in low-income settings who were treated with amoxicillin or benzyl penicillin for severe pneumonia.

See supplementary figure 2 of [19]. RCTs in adults with severe and nonsevere pneumonia include comparisons of oral versus intravenous antibiotics or comparisons of early switches from intravenous to oral antibiotics versus full intravenous courses. These RCTs have not shown any advantage of intravenous treatment, including studies in the United States [21], the Netherlands [22], Spain [23], and Germany [24]. For acute pyelonephritis, six paediatric RCTs (n = 917) concluded that an early switch to oral antibiotics is equivalent to longer intravenous regimes [25]. In patients with “low risk” febrile neutropenia (i.e., haemodynamically stable, without organ failure or an obvious source of severe infection), 22 RCTs (n = 2,372) concluded that oral treatment (or early switches to oral treatment) is an acceptable alternative to intravenous treatment [26]. One RCT demonstrated equivalent outcomes for oral antibiotics and intravenous antibiotics in infective endocarditis, recruiting 85 intravenous drug users (IVDUs) with uncomplicated right-sided native valve Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis [27]. Five RCTs (n = 205) were included in a meta-analysis comparing oral regimes to either intravenous antibiotics alone or intravenous antibiotics with an oral combination in chronic osteomyelitis. No statistically significant difference was detected in remission rates between the intravenous and the oral treatment groups [28]. In acute paediatric osteomyelitis, two retrospective cohort studies, one comparing early oral switch to intravenous antibiotic regimes (n = 1,969) and the other a direct oral versus intravenous comparison (n = 2,060), both reported that oral therapy was not associated with higher risk of treatment failures [29,30]. Ongoing trials examining the equivalence of oral and intravenous antibiotics include trials in neonatal sepsis in low-income settings [31] and in bone and joint infection in high-income settings [32]. Demonstration of equivalence in these trials would further reduce the need for hospitalization among neonates with suspected sepsis and among adults with bone or joint infection.

A Preference for Intravenous Therapy

The preference for intravenous therapy may be a legacy of the discovery of antibiotics. Penicillin acquired enduring fame by providing a dramatic cure following intravenous administration to acutely unwell patients [33]. Antibiotics that were well absorbed when administered orally became available in the years that followed but made less of an impression without similar stories of “miracle cures.” Salvarsan was the first antibiotic “magic bullet” to be routinely used and became the preferred treatment for syphilis. It required repeated parenteral injections, leading one US doctor to famously remark that “even the poor can scarcely be expected to submit with good grace to repeated barbarities offered in the name of medicine” [34]. This remark betrays some of the economic prejudice of the era but may also overlook medical history: dramatic and intrusive treatments are often preferred by patients and doctors, an effect that may contribute to a placebo effect [35]. It is therefore possible that “repeated barbarities” in fact influence some patients and their doctors to prefer intravenous therapy over the less impressive tablets on offer. When randomized controlled trials are designed to demonstrate “equivalence,” this implies that our default position should be to regard intravenous therapy as “safe and proven” and that we require substantial evidence to reassure us before changing practice. In fact, for many indications the theoretical reasons for preferring intravenous therapy are not strong, and the risks of intravenous therapy are well established. It would be more logical for many indications to regard oral antibiotics as the default position and require trial designs to test the superiority of intravenous therapy. Initial doses of intravenous therapy in acutely life-threatening conditions may be needed to provide immediate effective antimicrobial plasma concentrations. In cases in which intravenous access is required for supportive care (such as fluids), there seems little harm in giving intravenous antibiotics. There is little merit in trials to compare oral therapy with intravenous therapy for the first dose when admission to hospital for supportive care is required in any case, but when hospital admission or parenteral therapy in the community might be avoided with oral therapy, there can be substantial savings to be made and risks avoided for the patient and the health system [17]. In cases in which initial doses must be intravenous, an early switch to oral antibiotics is usually justified. It is not logical to make a switch to oral antibiotics dependent on “response to therapy”; this is a contingency that erroneously implies that intravenous therapy is somehow “stronger.” In order to consolidate the evidence base, large RCTs should now test higher-risk indications for intravenous antibiotics such as bacteraemia, meningitis, and bone infections. The risk of oral antibiotics in these trials can be mitigated by giving the first few doses intravenously. The complexity of selecting antibiotic agents and a broad range of conditions to consider makes large, pragmatic trials of strategy an attractive design. However, even for conditions covered by the current evidence base, substantial resistance to the use of oral antibiotics is encountered. Resistance to change comes from clinician reinforcement behaviour and other cognitive biases, fear of litigation, and reimbursement strategies adopted by insurance companies in which hospitalisation can be most readily justified by intravenous antibiotic use when oral therapy would have been sufficient [22,23,36]. The preference for intravenous antibiotics needs challenging and only large-scale trial data can overcome strongly held personal anecdotes and third-party institutional policy assumptions in which hospitalisation equals intravenous therapy. Medicine is indeed repeatedly barbarous when unnecessary iatrogenic harm is done.

Search criteria and studies for meta-analysis of treatment for severe pneumonia.

(TIFF) Click here for additional data file.
  33 in total

1.  Efficacy and safety of oral and early-switch therapy for community-acquired pneumonia: a randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  A Castro-Guardiola; A L Viejo-Rodríguez; S Soler-Simon; A Armengou-Arxé; V Bisbe-Company; G Peñarroja-Matutano; J Bisbe-Company; F García-Bragado
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  2001-10-01       Impact factor: 4.965

2.  The use of oral temafloxacin compared with a parenteral cephalosporin in hospitalized patients with pneumonia.

Authors:  F Vogel; H Lode
Journal:  J Antimicrob Chemother       Date:  1991-12       Impact factor: 5.790

Review 3.  Clinical pharmacokinetics of doxycycline and minocycline.

Authors:  S Saivin; G Houin
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  1988-12       Impact factor: 6.447

4.  A prospective randomized study of inpatient iv. antibiotics for community-acquired pneumonia. The optimal duration of therapy.

Authors:  R E Siegel; N A Halpern; P L Almenoff; A Lee; R Cashin; J G Greene
Journal:  Chest       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 9.410

5.  Correlation of antimicrobial pharmacokinetic parameters with therapeutic efficacy in an animal model.

Authors:  B Vogelman; S Gudmundsson; J Leggett; J Turnidge; S Ebert; W A Craig
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  1988-10       Impact factor: 5.226

6.  First clinical use of penicillin.

Authors:  C Fletcher
Journal:  Br Med J (Clin Res Ed)       Date:  1984 Dec 22-29

7.  Absorption and disposition kinetics of amoxicillin in normal human subjects.

Authors:  A Arancibia; J Guttmann; G González; C González
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  1980-02       Impact factor: 5.191

8.  Oral amoxicillin versus injectable penicillin for severe pneumonia in children aged 3 to 59 months: a randomised multicentre equivalency study.

Authors:  Emmanuel Addo-Yobo; Noel Chisaka; Mumtaz Hassan; Patricia Hibberd; Juan M Lozano; Prakash Jeena; William B MacLeod; Irene Maulen; Archana Patel; Shamim Qazi; Donald M Thea; Ngoc Tuong Vy Nguyen
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2004 Sep 25-Oct 1       Impact factor: 79.321

9.  Oral antibiotic treatment of right-sided staphylococcal endocarditis in injection drug users: prospective randomized comparison with parenteral therapy.

Authors:  A W Heldman; T V Hartert; S C Ray; E G Daoud; T E Kowalski; V J Pompili; S D Sisson; W C Tidmore; K A vom Eigen; S N Goodman; P S Lietman; B G Petty; C Flexner
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  1996-07       Impact factor: 4.965

10.  Audit of therapeutic interventions in inpatient children using two scores: are they evidence-based in developing countries?

Authors:  Nilton Y Carreazo; Carlos A Bada; Juan P Chalco; Luis Huicho
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2004-12-29       Impact factor: 2.655

View more
  19 in total

1.  Oral versus Intravenous Antibiotics for Bone and Joint Infection.

Authors:  Ho-Kwong Li; Ines Rombach; Rhea Zambellas; A Sarah Walker; Martin A McNally; Bridget L Atkins; Benjamin A Lipsky; Harriet C Hughes; Deepa Bose; Michelle Kümin; Claire Scarborough; Philippa C Matthews; Andrew J Brent; Jose Lomas; Roger Gundle; Mark Rogers; Adrian Taylor; Brian Angus; Ivor Byren; Anthony R Berendt; Simon Warren; Fiona E Fitzgerald; Damien J F Mack; Susan Hopkins; Jonathan Folb; Helen E Reynolds; Elinor Moore; Jocelyn Marshall; Neil Jenkins; Christopher E Moran; Andrew F Woodhouse; Samantha Stafford; R Andrew Seaton; Claire Vallance; Carolyn J Hemsley; Karen Bisnauthsing; Jonathan A T Sandoe; Ila Aggarwal; Simon C Ellis; Deborah J Bunn; Rebecca K Sutherland; Gavin Barlow; Cushla Cooper; Claudia Geue; Nicola McMeekin; Andrew H Briggs; Parham Sendi; Elham Khatamzas; Tri Wangrangsimakul; T H Nicholas Wong; Lucinda K Barrett; Abtin Alvand; C Fraser Old; Jennifer Bostock; John Paul; Graham Cooke; Guy E Thwaites; Philip Bejon; Matthew Scarborough
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2019-01-31       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Fluoroquinolone versus Beta-Lactam Oral Step-Down Therapy for Uncomplicated Streptococcal Bloodstream Infections.

Authors:  Kellie Arensman; Maureen Shields; Maya Beganovic; Jessica L Miller; Erik LaChance; Morgan Anderson; Jennifer Dela-Pena
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2020-10-20       Impact factor: 5.191

3.  Association Between Initial Route of Fluoroquinolone Administration and Outcomes in Patients Hospitalized for Community-acquired Pneumonia.

Authors:  Raquel K Belforti; Tara Lagu; Sarah Haessler; Peter K Lindenauer; Penelope S Pekow; Aruna Priya; Marya D Zilberberg; Daniel Skiest; Thomas L Higgins; Mihaela S Stefan; Michael B Rothberg
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2016-04-05       Impact factor: 9.079

4.  Opportunities for Stewardship in the Transition From Intravenous to Enteral Antibiotics in Hospitalized Pediatric Patients.

Authors:  Jillian M Cotter; Matt Hall; Sonya Tang Girdwood; John R Stephens; Jessica L Markham; James C Gay; Samir S Shah
Journal:  J Hosp Med       Date:  2021-02       Impact factor: 2.960

5.  The OVIVA trial.

Authors:  Philip A Bejon; Ho Kwong Li; Ines Rombach; Sarah Walker; Matthew Scarborough
Journal:  Lancet Infect Dis       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 71.421

6.  Why do people participate in mass anti-malarial administration? Findings from a qualitative study in Nong District, Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR (Laos).

Authors:  Bipin Adhikari; Koukeo Phommasone; Palingnaphone Kommarasy; Xayaphone Soundala; Phonesavanh Souvanthong; Tiengkham Pongvongsa; Gisela Henriques; Paul N Newton; Nicholas J White; Nicholas P J Day; Arjen M Dondorp; Lorenz von Seidlein; Mayfong Mayxay; Phaik Yeong Cheah; Christopher Pell
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2018-01-09       Impact factor: 2.979

7.  Engaging residents to choose wisely: Resident Doctors of Canada resource stewardship recommendations.

Authors:  Justin Hall; Reza Mirza; James Quinlan; Evan Chong; Karen Born; Brian Wong; Christopher Hillis
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2019-03-13

8.  Point Prevalence Survey of Antimicrobial Use in a Malaysian Tertiary Care University Hospital.

Authors:  Nurul Adilla Hayat Jamaluddin; Petrick Periyasamy; Chee Lan Lau; Sasheela Ponnampalavanar; Pauline Siew Mei Lai; Ramliza Ramli; Toh Leong Tan; Najma Kori; Mei Kuen Yin; Nur Jannah Azman; Rodney James; Karin Thursky; Isa Naina-Mohamed
Journal:  Antibiotics (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-04

9.  Malaria investigation and treatment of children admitted to county hospitals in western Kenya.

Authors:  Beatrice I Amboko; Philip Ayieko; Morris Ogero; Thomas Julius; Grace Irimu; Mike English
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2016-10-18       Impact factor: 2.979

10.  Invasive non-typhoidal Salmonella infections in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review on antimicrobial resistance and treatment.

Authors:  Bieke Tack; Jolien Vanaenrode; Jan Y Verbakel; Jaan Toelen; Jan Jacobs
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2020-07-17       Impact factor: 8.775

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.