| Literature DB >> 29234355 |
Daniele Donà1, Dora Luise1, Liviana Da Dalt2, Carlo Giaquinto1.
Abstract
Background: Pneumonia represents an important threat to children's health in both developed and developing countries. In the last 10 years, many national and international guidelines on the treatment of pediatric CAP have been published, in order to optimize the prescription of antibiotics and limit their cost and side effects. However, the practical implementation of these guidelines is still limited. Main Text: We analyzed the current recommendations for the therapy of pediatric community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) that all converge on the identification of aminopenicillins and beta-lactams as the optimal treatment for CAP. We also conducted a review of the current literature on antibiotic regimens used for pediatric CAP to identify the current state of guidelines implementation in different settings. We selected 37 studies published from 2010 to 2016, including both retrospective and prospective studies, mainly cross-sectional and hospital based. The results show a global heterogeneity in the antibiotics prescription for pediatric CAP, with application of guidelines varying from 0% to more than 91% and with important differences even within the same country. Conclusions: Our review has demonstrated that the implementation of the guidelines is still limited but also that achieving the optimal prescription is possible and can be done in both developed and developing countries.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29234355 PMCID: PMC5694995 DOI: 10.1155/2017/4239268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Figure 1Pediatric CAP guidelines timeline [adapted by Berti et al., 2013 [19]].
Papers on CAP antibiotic treatment in children from 2010 to 2016.
| Authors year of publication [ref.] | Country | Study design | Treated infections (% of pneumonia) | Population: age in/outpatient | Most prescribed antibiotics (%) | |
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| (1) | Amadeo et al. (2010) [ | Europe | Multicenter, 2-day PPS on abx prescriptions | Various (respiratory tract infection: 30%) | <18 y inpatients | Third-generation cephalosporins (18%) |
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| (2) | Ceyhan et al. (2010) [ | Turkey | Multicenter, cross-sectional, 1-day PPS | Various (29.4%) | <18 y inpatients | Cephalosporins (22.1%), |
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| (3) | Younis (2010) [ | Iraq | 6-month, multicenter, prospective, observational study | Various (20%) | 6 m–16 y inpatients | Ampicloxacillin (50%) |
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| (4) | Mohajer et al. (2011) [ | Saudi Arabia | 1-month, retrospective, cross-sectional study on pharmacy prescriptions | Various (16.2%) | <12 y inpatients | Cephalosporin <1 yr (44.6%), |
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| (5) | Bergicho et al. (2012) [ | Ethiopia | 1-month, single-center observational retrospective study on abx prescriptions | Various (9.27%) | <18 y inpatients | Cotrimoxazole (18.87%) |
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| (6) | Borrás Novell et al. (2013) [ | Spain | A 1-year, prospective multicenter study including patients seen in PED on day 14 of each month who required hospitalization with systemic abx | Various (29.4%) | <18 y inpatients | Cefotaxime (27.8%), |
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| (7) | Brogan et al. (2012) [ | USA | 5-year, multicenter, retrospective cohort study from the Pediatric Health Information System (PHIS) | 100% | 1–18 y inpatients | Cephalosporins (40.4%) |
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| (8) | Fossum et al. (2013) [ | Norway | 1-year, observational study primary care records | All respiratory tract infection (2.4%) | <6 y outpatients | Macrolides (44%) |
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| (9) | Gwimile et al. (2012) [ | Tanzania | 7-month, single-center, cross-sectional descriptive hospital based study | Various (41%) | 1 m–5 y inpatients | Penicillin (47.9%) |
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| (10) | Moinuddin et al. (2012) [ | India | 9-month, prospective treatment charts review | 100% | <18 y inpatients | Third-generation cephalosporins (57.2%) |
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| (11) | Choudry and Bezbaruah (2013) [ | India | 1-month, single-center observational prospective study on abx prescriptions | Various (17%) | <12 y inpatients | Coamoxiclav (35%) |
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| (12) | De Sá Del Fiol et al. (2013) [ | Brazil | 12-month, cross-sectional study on questionnaire on abx prescriptions in two Primary Health Centres | Various (3.13%) | <9 y outpatients | Penicillin (73.13%) |
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| (13) | Dorj et al. (2013) [ | Mongolia | 10-week observational prospective study on written abx prescriptions of community pharmacies in rural and urban areas | 100% | Adults and children outpatients | Aminopenicillins (16%) |
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| (14) | Feleke et al. (2013) [ | Ethiopia | 6-month, prospective, cross-sectional study on patients charts | Various (56.3%) | <10 y inpatients | Ceftriaxone (43.50%) |
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| (15) | Neuman et al. (2013) [ | USA | Data were obtained from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) for ED visits from 2001 through 2009 for children with CAP | 100% | Adults and children outpatients | Cephalosporin (35%) |
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| (16) | Alakhali and Shaik_Mohammad (2014) [ | Saudi Arabia | 2-month, observational, retrospective study on abx prescriptions | Various (9.7%) | <12 y inpatients | Cephalosporin (52%) |
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| (17) | Dubos et al. (2014) [ | France | A phone survey with a standardized questionnaire submitted randomly to GPs, pediatricians, and pediatric fellows | 100% | <18 y outpatients | Coamoxiclav 54% |
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| (18) | Maltezou et al. (2014) [ | Greece | A standardized questionnaire distributed to 520 private-practice pediatricians | 100% | <18 y outpatients | Compliance with the first-line recommended antibiotic was 30.6% for CAP |
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| (19) | Mishra et al. (2014) [ | India | Single-center, prospective, interventional study | Various (LRTI: 17.9%) | 1 m–16 y outpatient | Amoxicillin (44%) |
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| (20) | Osowicki et al. (2015) [ | Australia | Multicentre, single-day, hospital-wide PPS | Various (LRTI: 22%) | <18 y inpatients | Narrow-spectrum penicillin (18%) |
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| (21) | Salih et al. (2014) [ | Sudan | 12-month, cross-sectional study on abx prescriptions | 100% (severe) | 2 m–5 y inpatients | Coamoxiclav (22.1%) |
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| (22) | Sviestina et al. (2014) [ | France, Latvia, and UK | Multicenter, 1-day PPS on abx prescriptions ## | Various: LRTI Latvia (26.2%), France (11.8%), UK (9.3%) | <18 y inpatients | UK: piperacillin/tazobactam (32%), coamoxiclav (26%) |
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| (23) | Awor et al. (2015) [ | Uganda | All drug shops in the intervention area were included and all child visits in 8 months were analyzed | Various (45%) | <7 y outpatients | Amoxicillin (91%) |
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| (24) | Fadare et al. (2015) [ | Nigeria | 7- month, cross-sectional study using medical records | Various (respiratory tract infections: 53.7%) | <5 y outpatients | Amoxicillin (52.4%) |
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| (25) | Iroh Tam et al. (2015) [ | USA | Multicenter, retrospective study (six hospitals) on medical records with pneumonia | 100% | 2 m–18 y inpatients | Third-generation cephalosporins (72%) |
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| (26) | Milner et al. (2015) [ | USA | 2-year multicenter retrospective cohort study | 100% | 3 m–18 y | Emergency department providers prescribed narrow-spectrum therapy 27% of the time |
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| (27) | Thapaliya et al. (2013) [ | Nepal | 6-month, single center, retrospective study on medical charts | Various (22.5%) | <13 y inpatients | Cephalosporins (ceftriaxone 49.3%, cefotaxime 26.2%) |
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| (28) | Williams et al. (2015) [ | USA | 6-month multicenter, prospective, population-based, active surveillance of CAP hospitalizations among children pre: 1–9%, post: 15.2% | 100% | 3 m–18 y inpatients | Cephalosporins pre (52.8%) |
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| (29) | Fonseca Lima et al. (2016) [ | Brazil | 3-year, single-center, cross-sectional study | 100% | 1 m–5 y inpatients | Ampicillin 62.17% |
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| (30) | De Luca et al. (2016) [ | Italy | 1-day PPS on abx prescriptions ## | Various (LRTI: 22.1% of children, 2.3% of neonates) | <18 y inpatients | Cephalosporins (43.3%) |
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| (31) | Ivanovska et al. (2016) [ | Netherlands | 3-year, retrospective, observational study, deriving data on diagnoses and prescriptions from the electronic health records-based NIVEL Primary Care Database | Respiratory tract infection (pneumonia 5.8–7.1%) | <18 y outpatients | Amoxicillin: 2010 (60.4%), 2011 (66.9%), and 2012 (63%) |
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| (32) | Launay et al. (2016) [ | France | Multicenter, prospective two-period study using data from the French pneumonia network | 100% | 1 m–15 y inpatients | First period: amoxicillin 58.1% |
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| (33) | Sharma et al. (2016) [ | Guyana | 1-year, retrospective chart review of pediatric patients seen in the emergency department | Various (RTI: 19.5%) | 1 m–13 y outpatients | Amoxicillin 33.6% |
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| (34) | Thomson et al. (2015) [ | USA | 15-month, single-center, retrospective cohort study | 100% | 3 m–18 y inpatients | Aminopenicillins (63.6%) |
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| (35) | Usonis et al. (2016) [ | Europe | Snapshot prospective study based on a questionnaire developed and distributed by the CAP Paediatric Research Initiative (CAP-PRI) working group and distributed across Europe | 100% | <18 y inpatients and outpatients | Inpatients: amoxicillin (32%), ampicillin (37%) |
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| (36) | Vesporten et al. (2016) [ | Africa, Asia, Oceania, Latina America, North America and Europe | 1-day PPS on abx prescriptions ## | Various (LRTI 18.7%) | <18 y inpatients | Third-generation cephalosporins: Eastern Europe (37.5%) and Asia (28.6%), fourth-generation cephalosporins in North America (13.3%). Narrow-spectrum (b- lactamase sensitive penicillin 11% in Africa and 4.3% in Northern Europe) |
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| (37) | Zec et al. (2016) [ | Serbia | Single-center, 6-month, retrospective study on medical charts | 100% | 1 m–6 y inpatients | Cephalosporins (cefazolin 40.4%, third-generation cephalosporins 31.7%) |
##Data from Antibiotic Resistance and Prescribing in European Children (ARPEC) project.
Figure 2World map of papers on CAP treatment in children stratified by year of publication.