| Literature DB >> 31630410 |
Lucy Davidson1, Jessica Knight1,2, Asha C Bowen1,2,3.
Abstract
Impetigo, scabies, cellulitis and abscesses are common in Australian Aboriginal children. These conditions adversely affect wellbeing and are associated with serious long term sequelae, including invasive infection and post-infectious complications, such as acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis and acute rheumatic fever, which occurs at the highest documented rates in the world in remote Aboriginal communities. Observational research in remote communities in northern Australia has demonstrated a high concurrent burden of scabies and impetigo and their post-infectious complications. Few data are available for other Australian states, especially for urban Aboriginal children; however, nationwide hospital data indicate that the disparity between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children in skin infection prevalence also exists in urban settings. The Australian National Healthy Skin Guideline summarises evidence-based treatment of impetigo, scabies and fungal infections in high burden settings such as remote Aboriginal communities. It recommends systemic antibiotics for children with impetigo, and either topical permethrin or oral ivermectin (second line) for the individual and their contacts as equally efficacious treatments for scabies. β-Lactams are the treatment of choice and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and clindamycin are effective alternatives for treatment of paediatric cellulitis. Abscesses require incision and drainage and a 5-day course of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or clindamycin. Addressing normalisation of skin infections and the social determinants of skin health are key challenges for the clinician. Research is underway on community-wide skin health programs and the role for mass drug administration which will guide future management of these common, treatable diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Cellulitis; Parasitic diseases; Skin diseases, infectious; Social determinants of health; Staphylococcus; Streptococcus
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31630410 PMCID: PMC9543154 DOI: 10.5694/mja2.50361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med J Aust ISSN: 0025-729X Impact factor: 12.776
| Study | Year | Region |
Number of patients surveyed (age 0–15 years) |
Impetigo prevalence (age 0–15 years) |
Scabies prevalence (age 0–15 years) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nimmo et al | 1990 | QLD | 120 | 43% | nd |
| Van Buynder et al | 1992 | NT | 180 | 17% | nd |
| Streeton et al | 1993 | QLD | 583 | 34% | nd |
| Carapetis et al | 1994 | NT | 81 | 48% | nd |
| Carapetis et al | 1994 | NT | 62 | 69% | 29% |
| Shelby‐James et al | 1995 | NT | 79 | 90% | 23% |
| Wong et al | 2000 | NT | 217 | 23% | 35% |
| Lehmann et al | 2000 | WA | 121 | 66% | 5% |
| Andrews et al | 2004 | NT | 582 | 46% | 16% |
| Andrews et al | 2004 | NT | 2001 | 40% | nd |
| Heath et al | 2005 | QLD | 157 | 13% | nd |
| Tasani et al | 2012 | NT | 1751 | 50% | 14% |
| Leach et al | 2014 | NT | 651 | 18% | 12% |
nd = no data; NT = Northern Territory; QLD = Queensland; WA = Western Australia.
Adapted from Bowen et al4 and updated with more recent publications.
Mean (standard deviation [SD]), 42.8 ± 21.8%; median, 43% (interquartile range [IQR], 20.5–50.8%).
Mean (SD), 19.1 ± 9.6%; median 16% (IQR, 12–29%).
| Condition | First line treatment | GRADE | Second line treatment | GRADE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Impetigo |
Peroral trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole twice a day for 3 days or once a day for 5 days; or intramuscular benzathine penicillin G | 1A |
Peroral amoxicillin three times per day for 7 days; or peroral erythromycin four times per day for 7 days | 2B |
| Scabies |
Topical permethrin on Day 1 and Day 8 for the index patient and household contacts | 1A |
Peroral ivermectin on Day 1 and Day 8 for the index patient who has failed treatment with topical permethrin within the preceding 4 weeks | 1B |
| Cellulitis |
Intravenous β‐lactam for up to 2 days (for severe cellulitis only) followed by oral β‐lactam (eg, cephalexin four times per day for a total of 5 days) | 1A |
Peroral trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole twice a day for 5 days; or peroral clindamycin three times per day for 5 days | 1B |
| Abscesses |
Incision and drainage; followed by peroral clindamycin three times per day for 5 days; or peroral trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole twice a day for 5 days | 1A |
GRADE definitions: 1A: Strong recommendation, applies to most patients without reservation. 1B: Strong recommendation, applies to most patients. 2B: Weak recommendation, alternative approaches are likely to be better for some patients under some circumstances.