| Literature DB >> 35855006 |
Eric W Hall1, Ashley Tippett2, Scott Fridkin3, Evan J Anderson2, Ben Lopman4, David Benkeser5, Julia M Baker4.
Abstract
Background: Vaccines may play a role in controlling the spread of antibiotic resistance. However, it is unknown if rotavirus vaccination affects antibiotic use in the United States (US).Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial agents; prescriptions; rotavirus; vaccination
Year: 2022 PMID: 35855006 PMCID: PMC9291383 DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofac276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis ISSN: 2328-8957 Impact factor: 4.423
Definition of Variables Used in Analysis of IBM MarketScan Commercial Database
| Code Source and Variable | Codes | Definition |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Complete rotavirus vaccination (exposure) | 90680, 90681 | Complete series (2 doses of 90681 or 3 doses of 90680) by 8 months of age |
| No rotavirus vaccination | Same as above | No doses by 8 months of age |
| PCV vaccination | 90669, 90670 | At least 2 doses by 8 months of age |
|
| ||
| AGE diagnosis |
| Any AGE code after 8 months of age |
| Therapeutic Class Codes | ||
| Any antibiotic prescription | 4 = aminoglycosides, 6 = cephalosporin, 7 = β-lactam, 9 = erythromycin and macrolide, 10 = penicillins, 12 = miscellaneous antibiotics, 16 = quinolones, 17 = sulfonamides and combinations, 18 = sulfones, 19 = urinary anti-infectives, 20 = miscellaneous anti-infectives | Any antibiotic prescription after 8 months of age |
| Antibiotic prescription following AGE (primary outcome) | Same as above | Any prescription after 8 months of age and within 3 days of an outpatient AGE diagnosis or the discharge date of an inpatient AGE diagnosis |
| Second antibiotic prescription following AGE | Same as above | National Drug Code number (label and product segment) that is different from first antibiotic prescription and within 28 days of initial prescription that followed an AGE diagnosis |
Abbreviations: AGE, acute gastroenteritis; ICD-9, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision; ICD-10, International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision; PCV, pneumococcal conjugate vaccine.
Characteristics of Analytic Cohort[a], by Rotavirus Vaccination Status, 2007–2018
| Characteristic[ | Total | Complete Rotavirus Vaccination[ | No Rotavirus Vaccinationc | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (N = 2 136 136) | (n = 1 493 605) | (n = 336 434) | ||||
| Any antibiotic prescription | 1 183 658 | (55.4) | 846 883 | (56.7) | 175 103 | (52.0) |
| AGE diagnoses | 428 112 | (20.0) | 295 273 | (19.8) | 71 252 | (21.2) |
| Antibiotic prescription following AGE | 17 318 | (0.8) | 11 572 | (0.8) | 3149 | (0.9) |
| Typical rotavirus season (January–June) | 9023 | (0.4) | 5879 | (0.4) | 1823 | (0.5) |
| Second antibiotic within 28 days | 2692 | (0.1) | 1832 | (0.1) | 479 | (0.2) |
| PCV vaccination | 1 952 983 | (91.4) | 1 486 065 | (99.5) | 194 426 | (57.8) |
| Provider type | ||||||
| Pediatrician | 1 818 962 | (85.2) | 1 319 794 | (88.4) | 243 396 | (72.3) |
| Family practitioner (no pediatrician) | 128 119 | (6.0) | 60 113 | (4.0) | 46 209 | (13.7) |
| Other | 189 055 | (8.9) | 113 698 | (7.6) | 46 829 | (13.9) |
| Urban/rural | ||||||
| Any MSA | 1 754 859 | (82.2) | 1 248 215 | (83.6) | 260 673 | (77.5) |
| Rural | 381 277 | (17.8) | 245 390 | (16.4) | 75 761 | (22.5) |
Data are presented as No. (column %).
Abbreviations: AGE, acute gastroenteritis; MSA, metropolitan statistical area; PCV, pneumococcal conjugate vaccine.
Includes children who were born in states that do not have a universal vaccination program and maintained health insurance coverage for their first 6 months.
Definitions for all variables are included in Table 1.
Includes both monovalent (Current Procedural Terminology [CPT] code: 90680) and pentavalent (CPT code: 90680) rotavirus vaccination.
Adjusted Relative Cumulative Incidence of Antibiotic Prescription Associated With an Acute Gastroenteritis Diagnosis, at Different Ages, 2007–2018
| Age | Antibiotic Prescription Associated With AGE | Antibiotic Prescription Associated With AGE (January–June Only) | Switch of Antibiotic Prescription Associated With AGE | Any Antibiotic Prescription |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ratio[ | Ratio[ | Ratio[ | Ratio[ | |
| 1 year | 0.909 (.841–.986) | 0.836 (.762–.921) | 0.893 (.758–1.050) | 1.050 (1.043–1.055) |
| 2 year | 0.821 (.784–.862) | 0.746 (.703–.798) | 0.826 (.748–.925) | 1.046 (1.041–1.050) |
| 3 year | 0.806 (.771–.842) | 0.735 (.697–.781) | 0.806 (.736–.890) | 1.039 (1.036–1.043) |
| 4 year | 0.805 (.774–.841) | 0.730 (.693–.776) | 0.817 (.747–.903) | 1.031 (1.028–1.035) |
| 5 year | 0.793 (.761–.827) | 0.729 (.691–.773) | 0.821 (.750–.905) | 1.025 (1.022–1.028) |
Abbreviations: AGE, acute gastroenteritis; CI, confidence interval.
Adjusted using 12 strata defined by provider type (3 categories), urban/rural (2 categories), and receipt of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (2 categories).
Ratio compares children with complete rotavirus vaccination vs children with no rotavirus vaccination by 8 months of age.
Intervals are estimated using 1000 bootstrap replications.
Figure 1.Adjusted cumulative incidence of antibiotic prescription associated with an acute gastroenteritis diagnosis, by rotavirus vaccine status, 2007–2018. Estimates are adjusted using 12 strata defined by provider type (3 categories), urban/rural (2 categories), and receipt of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (2 categories).
Figure 2.Adjusted relative incidence of antibiotic prescription associated with an acute gastroenteritis diagnosis, 2007–2018. Estimates are adjusted using 12 strata defined by provider type (3 categories), urban/rural (2 categories), and receipt of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (2 categories). Ratio compares children with complete rotavirus vaccination vs children with no rotavirus vaccination by 8 months of age. Intervals are estimated using 1000 bootstrap replications.