Antibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary care

<br><strong>Background: </strong>Childhood antibiotic exposure has important clinically relevant implications. These include disruption to the microbiome, antibiotic resistance, and clinical workload manifesting as treatment ‘failure’.</br> <br><strong>Aim: </...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Van Hecke, O, Fuller, A, Bankhead, C, Jenkins-Jones, S, Francis, N, Moore, M, Butler, C, Wang, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Royal College of General Practitioners 2019
_version_ 1797061933195591680
author Van Hecke, O
Fuller, A
Bankhead, C
Jenkins-Jones, S
Francis, N
Moore, M
Butler, C
Wang, K
author_facet Van Hecke, O
Fuller, A
Bankhead, C
Jenkins-Jones, S
Francis, N
Moore, M
Butler, C
Wang, K
author_sort Van Hecke, O
collection OXFORD
description <br><strong>Background: </strong>Childhood antibiotic exposure has important clinically relevant implications. These include disruption to the microbiome, antibiotic resistance, and clinical workload manifesting as treatment ‘failure’.</br> <br><strong>Aim: </strong>To examine the relationship between the number of antibiotic courses prescribed to preschool children for acute respiratory tract infections (RTI), in the preceding year, and subsequent RTIs that failed to respond to antibiotic treatment (‘response failures’).</br> <br><strong>Design and setting: </strong>A cohort study using UK primary care data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, 2009 to 2016.</br> <br><strong>Method: </strong>Children aged 12 to 60 months (1 to 5 years) who were prescribed an antibiotic for an acute RTI (upper and lower RTI or otitis media) were included. One random index antibiotic course for RTI per child was selected. Exposure was the number of antibiotic prescriptions for acute RTI up to 12 months before the index antibiotic prescription. The outcome was ‘response failure’ up to 14 days after index antibiotic prescription, defined as: subsequent antibiotic prescription; referral; hospital admission; death; or emergency department attendance within 3 days. The authors used logistic regression models to estimate the odds between antibiotic exposure and response failure.</br> <br><strong>Results: </strong>Out of 114 329 children who were prescribed an antibiotic course for acute RTI, children who received ≥2 antibiotic courses for acute RTIs in the preceding year had greater odds of response failure; one antibiotic course: adjusted odds ratio (OR) 1.03 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.88 to 1.21), P = 0.67, n = 230 children; ≥2 antibiotic courses: adjusted OR 1.32 (CI = 1.04 to 1.66), P = 0.02, n = 97.</br> <br><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Childhood antibiotic exposure for acute RTI may be a good predictor for subsequent response failure (but not necessarily because of antibiotic treatment failure). Further research is needed to improve understanding of the mechanisms underlying response failure.</br>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:38:16Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:335ead12-8f35-4f35-a16d-0f0d534171e1
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T20:38:16Z
publishDate 2019
publisher Royal College of General Practitioners
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:335ead12-8f35-4f35-a16d-0f0d534171e12022-03-26T13:19:52ZAntibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary careJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:335ead12-8f35-4f35-a16d-0f0d534171e1EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordRoyal College of General Practitioners2019Van Hecke, OFuller, ABankhead, CJenkins-Jones, SFrancis, NMoore, MButler, CWang, K<br><strong>Background: </strong>Childhood antibiotic exposure has important clinically relevant implications. These include disruption to the microbiome, antibiotic resistance, and clinical workload manifesting as treatment ‘failure’.</br> <br><strong>Aim: </strong>To examine the relationship between the number of antibiotic courses prescribed to preschool children for acute respiratory tract infections (RTI), in the preceding year, and subsequent RTIs that failed to respond to antibiotic treatment (‘response failures’).</br> <br><strong>Design and setting: </strong>A cohort study using UK primary care data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, 2009 to 2016.</br> <br><strong>Method: </strong>Children aged 12 to 60 months (1 to 5 years) who were prescribed an antibiotic for an acute RTI (upper and lower RTI or otitis media) were included. One random index antibiotic course for RTI per child was selected. Exposure was the number of antibiotic prescriptions for acute RTI up to 12 months before the index antibiotic prescription. The outcome was ‘response failure’ up to 14 days after index antibiotic prescription, defined as: subsequent antibiotic prescription; referral; hospital admission; death; or emergency department attendance within 3 days. The authors used logistic regression models to estimate the odds between antibiotic exposure and response failure.</br> <br><strong>Results: </strong>Out of 114 329 children who were prescribed an antibiotic course for acute RTI, children who received ≥2 antibiotic courses for acute RTIs in the preceding year had greater odds of response failure; one antibiotic course: adjusted odds ratio (OR) 1.03 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.88 to 1.21), P = 0.67, n = 230 children; ≥2 antibiotic courses: adjusted OR 1.32 (CI = 1.04 to 1.66), P = 0.02, n = 97.</br> <br><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Childhood antibiotic exposure for acute RTI may be a good predictor for subsequent response failure (but not necessarily because of antibiotic treatment failure). Further research is needed to improve understanding of the mechanisms underlying response failure.</br>
spellingShingle Van Hecke, O
Fuller, A
Bankhead, C
Jenkins-Jones, S
Francis, N
Moore, M
Butler, C
Wang, K
Antibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary care
title Antibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary care
title_full Antibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary care
title_fullStr Antibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary care
title_full_unstemmed Antibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary care
title_short Antibiotic exposure and ‘response failure’ for subsequent respiratory tract infections: an observational cohort study of UK preschool children in primary care
title_sort antibiotic exposure and response failure for subsequent respiratory tract infections an observational cohort study of uk preschool children in primary care
work_keys_str_mv AT vanheckeo antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare
AT fullera antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare
AT bankheadc antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare
AT jenkinsjoness antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare
AT francisn antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare
AT moorem antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare
AT butlerc antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare
AT wangk antibioticexposureandresponsefailureforsubsequentrespiratorytractinfectionsanobservationalcohortstudyofukpreschoolchildreninprimarycare