| Literature DB >> 30580758 |
Titus H Divala1,2, Elizabeth L Corbett3,4,5, Helen R Stagg6, Marriott Nliwasa3,4, Derek J Sloan7, Neil French8, Katherine L Fielding3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antimicrobial resistance generates a huge health and economic burden and has the potential to become the leading cause of death globally, but its underlying drivers are yet to be fully described. The association between a microbe's exposure to antimicrobials and subsequent development of, or selection for, resistance is well documented, as are the exacerbating microbial and human factors. However, the nature and extent of this risk, and how it varies by antimicrobial class and duration of treatment, is poorly defined. The goal of our systematic review and network meta-analysis is to determine the relationship between the duration of antimicrobial exposure and selection for resistance. We will use macrolides as the antimicrobial class of interest and Streptococcus pneumoniae carriage as an indicator organism. Our secondary outcomes include duration of symptoms, risk of treatment failure and recurrence, and descriptions of resistance mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; Carriage; Disease recurrence; Macrolides; Network meta-analysis; Prescriptions; Resistance mechanisms; Streptococcus pneumoniae; Treatment duration; Treatment failure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30580758 PMCID: PMC6304229 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-018-0917-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Hypothetical network of anticipated randomised controlled trial data for the effect of macrolide treatment duration on the development of antimicrobial resistance. Each treatment group is a node. The lines joining nodes, termed edges, will be drawn to thickness that graphically represents the amount of direct evidence: the number of comparisons that we expect to find between a particular pair of nodes
Search strategy for MEDLINE using Ovid platform
| Theme | Line number | Searches |
|---|---|---|
| Antimicrobial resistance | 1. | drug resista* or exp drug resistance, microbial/ |
| 2. | bacterial resistan*.ti,ab. | |
| 3. | antimicrobial resistan*.ti,ab. | |
| 4. | 1 or 2 or 3 | |
| Macrolides | 5. | MACROLIDES/ |
| 6. | (Azithromycin or Clarithromycin or Erythromycin or Fidaxomicin or Telithromycin or Carbomycin A or Josamycin or Kitasamycin or Midecamycin or midecamycin acetate or Oleandomycin or Solithromycin or Spiramycin or Troleandomycin or Tylosin or tylocine or Roxithromycin).ti,ab. | |
| 7. | 5 or 6 | |
| Antimicrobial resistance studies that use macrolides ( | 8. | 4 and 7 |
| MEDLINE filter for clinical trials | 9. | randomised controlled trial.pt. |
| 10. | controlled clinical trial.pt. | |
| 11. | randomised.ab. | |
| 12. | placebo.ab. | |
| 13. | drug therapy.fs. | |
| 14 | randomly.ab. | |
| 15. | trial.ab. | |
| 16. | groups.ab. | |
| 17. | arms.ab. | |
| 18. | 9 or 10 or 11 or 12 or 13 or 14 or 15 or 16 or 17 | |
| 19. | exp animals/ not humans.sh. | |
| 20. | 19 not 18 | |
| Antimicrobial resistance studies that use macrolides in clinical trials | 21. | 8 and 20 |
Fig. 2Counterfactual framework guiding analysis for the primary outcome of the systematic review