| Literature DB >> 30286726 |
Elias Eythorsson1, Samuel Sigurdsson1, Birgir Hrafnkelsson2, Helga Erlendsdóttir1,3, Ásgeir Haraldsson1,4, Karl G Kristinsson5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antimicrobial resistance is a public-health threat and antimicrobial consumption is the main contributor. The ten-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PHiD-CV10) was introduced into the Icelandic vaccination program in 2011. The aim was to estimate the vaccine impact of PHiD-CV10 on outpatient antimicrobial prescriptions in children.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic agents; Observational study; Otitis media; Pneumococcal vaccines; Survival analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30286726 PMCID: PMC6172799 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-018-3416-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Classification of antimicrobials used in this study
| First-line penicillins | Amoxicillin, phenoxymethylpenicillin |
| Second-line penicillins | Amoxicillin and enzyme inhibitor |
| First-generation macrolide | Erythromycin |
| Second-generation macrolide | Azithromycin, clarithromycin, |
| Cephalosporin | Cefalexin |
| Others | Ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, pivmecillinam, Trimethoprim/sulfmethoxazole, |
Incidence rate (IR) of all-cause and AOM-associated antimicrobial prescriptions per 100 person-years, comparing the Vaccine non-eligible cohorts (born 2005–2010, VNEC) to the Vaccine eligible cohorts (born: 2011–2015, VEC). aPrimary care data was only available until December 31st 2015. Therefore fewer person-years at-risk were available for the VEC when considering AOM-associated prescriptions and are as follows; 10,719; 9613; 8508; 7323; 6215 and 5083
| Age-groups (months) | VNEC | VEC | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IR (n of prescriptions) | Person-years at-risk | IR (n of prescriptions) | Person-years at-risk | |||
| All cause | AOM-associated | All cause | AOM-associated | |||
| < 6 | 47.0 (6816) | 11.6 (1681) | 14,491 | 39.1 (4338) | 7.58 (813) | 11,096a |
| 6–11 | 206 (29,674) | 69.1 (9931) | 14,378 | 176 (19,447) | 52.5 (5045) | 11,024a |
| 12–17 | 247 (35,226) | 72.9 (10,372) | 14,233 | 233 (24,588) | 62.2 (5295) | 10,566a |
| 18–23 | 199 (28,008) | 49.9 (7309) | 14,096 | 189 (17,876) | 46.6 (3411) | 9460a |
| 24–29 | 164 (22,843) | 35.0 (4882) | 13,965 | 144 (12,069) | 30.3 (1882) | 8374a |
| 30–35 | 125 (17,259) | 24.1 (3331) | 13,848 | 112 (7218) | 21.1 (1074) | 7218a |
Number of prescription per calendar year for children < 3 years of age and the proportion of each antimicrobial class
| Calendar year | Incidence of prescriptions per 100 person-years (n) | First line penicillins (%) | Second line penicillins (%) | First generation macrolides (%) | Second generation macrolides (%) | Cephalosporins (%) | Other (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | 204 (25649) | 41.41 | 37.92 | 1.48 | 6.55 | 5.37 | 7.26 |
| 2006 | 205 (26396) | 40.34 | 39.57 | 1.27 | 6.22 | 5.36 | 7.24 |
| 2007 | 192 (25179) | 44.97 | 36.80 | 1.60 | 6.39 | 5.16 | 5.08 |
| 2008 | 178 (24046) | 46.74 | 35.22 | 0.20 | 6.37 | 5.91 | 5.57 |
| 2009 | 159 (22406) | 46.41 | 37.16 | 0.05 | 5.51 | 6.33 | 4.55 |
| 2010 | 167 (24007) | 43.71 | 38.55 | 0.02 | 5.54 | 7.02 | 5.17 |
| 2011 | 164 (23866) | 44.70 | 37.92 | 0.03 | 5.91 | 7.47 | 3.98 |
| 2012 | 160 (22703) | 43.45 | 39.01 | 0.01 | 6.92 | 7.77 | 2.83 |
| 2013 | 152 (21113) | 32.10 | 48.08 | 0.02 | 6.56 | 10.03 | 3.20 |
| 2014 | 152 (20325) | 18.48 | 55.46 | 0.01 | 6.60 | 14.53 | 4.92 |
| 2015 | 150 (19873) | 18.49 | 53.91 | 0.06 | 7.25 | 14.95 | 5.34 |
| 2016 | 160 (20543) | 35.28 | 41.68 | 0.04 | 5.52 | 12.91 | 4.57 |
Fig. 1Incidence rate (IR) of antimicrobial prescriptions per 100 person-years for each birth-cohort for each of the six age groups as columns, blue for the vaccine non-eligible cohorts (NVEC, born 2005–2010) and red for the vaccine eligible cohorts (VEC, born 2011–2015). Error bars represent 95% confidence interval for IR. Incidence rate ratio (IRR) between the VNEC and VEC with 95% confidence intervals are displayed at the end of the columns
The proportion and 95% confidence interval for the vaccine non-eligible cohorts (VNEC, born: 2005–2010) and the vaccine eligible cohorts (VEC, born 2011–2013) that had filled 0, 1–4, 5–9, 10–14 and ≥ 15 prescriptions at 36 months of age. Only children with full 36 months follow-up were included
| Number of prescriptions | Incidence proportion (%) | Incidence risk ratio (95%CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| VNEC | VEC | ||
| 0 | 11.4 | 13.2 | 1.16 (1.10–1.23) |
| 1–4 | 43.7 | 47.3 | 1.08 (1.06–1.11) |
| 5–9 | 31.6 | 29.1 | 0.92 (0.89–0.95) |
| 10–14 | 9.8 | 7.5 | 0.77 (0.72–0.82) |
| ≥15 | 3.5 | 2.9 | 0.83 (0.74–0.93) |
| Total | 100 | 100 | |
Fig. 2Antimicrobial prescriptions are linked to primary care visits if filled within three days of the index visit. Both graphs represent children < 36 months of age and are shown by calendar year. a represents the proportion of all antimicrobial prescriptions which were associated with a primary care visit due to a specific diagnostic group. b represents the incidence of antimicrobial prescriptions per 100 person-years which were associated with a diagnostic group
Fig. 3The hazard ratio (HR) from the cox-regression model for each of the study birth-cohorts compared to the last vaccine non-eligible birth-cohort (2010), the reference birth-cohort. Boxes represent point estimates for HR and lines the 95% confidence intervals
Fig. 4Expected mean number of prescription per child for the vaccine non-eligible cohorts (VNEC, born 2005–2010) and the vaccine eligible cohorts (VEC, born 2011–2015), for both genders from birth to third birthday. Lines represent point estimates and shaded area the 95% confidence intervals