Short Antibiotic Courses Safer for Breathing-Tube Infections in Children

Article

Short courses of antibiotics appear just as effective as longer ones and a great deal safer in treating respiratory infections that might cause pneumonia in children on temporary breathing devices, according to a Johns Hopkins Childrens Center study published online May 3 in Clinical Infectious Diseases.

In the studys analysis of 150 children treated with antibiotics for respiratory infections while on a ventilator, longer antibiotic courses did not only fail to confer extra protection against full-blown pneumonia when compared with shorter therapy, but also considerably increased a childs risk for developing drug-resistant infections within a month.

To rein in the spread of bacterial drug resistance, the researchers advise clinicians to carefully evaluate the need for antibiotics in the first place and to use antibiotics for the shortest time needed to achieve clinical effect.

"Our study underscores the old physician maxim to first do no harm," says lead investigator Pranita Tamma, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Hopkins Childrens. "Longer treatment is not always more effective, and it could be downright dangerous."

Children on ventilators often develop respiratory infections, or tracheitis, because the breathing tubes allow bacteria an easy entry into the respiratory tract. These children need antibiotics promptly to prevent the infection from spreading into the lungs, but the optimal length of treatment has been unclear.

"We hope that our findings will help clear up some of the confusion and discourage physicians from preemptively opting for longer treatments," Tamma says.

The Johns Hopkins investigators analyzed three years' worth of medical records involving more than 1,600 children, age 18 and younger, who spent at least two days on a breathing tube. Of them, 150 got antibiotics for ventilator-related upper respiratory infections, however only 118 of them met clinical criteria for such infections, and 32 were treated merely on suspicion of infection.

Of the 82 children with actual infections who were treated with antibiotics for more than a week, 23 percent developed pneumonia, compared to 20 percent of the 36 children who got antibiotics for seven days or fewer. However, children who received the lengthy antibiotic course were five times more likely, on average, to develop drug-resistant infections following the treatment. Children who got multiple antibiotics were three times as likely to do so.

Although the length of antibiotic use made no statistical difference in pneumonia risk, the length of intubation did. Children whose tubes were left in after diagnosis of infection and start of therapy were four times more likely to progress to pneumonia than children taken off the ventilator promptly after diagnosis and start of treatment, the researchers found. The finding emphasizes the need for careful daily reassessment of each childs need to stay on a ventilator, they added.

Past research has shown that more than one-third of antibiotic prescriptions for upper respiratory infections in the intensive care unit may be unwarranted, the investigators noted.

"Beyond fueling drug resistance, antibiotics can cause serious side effects and add to healthcare costs. We, as physicians, should ask ourselves two critical questions any time we prescribe them: Does this patient really need antibiotics? If so, what is the shortest course of treatment that will achieve clinical benefit?" said senior investigator Sara Cosgrove, M.D., an infectious disease specialist at Hopkins.

Other investigators in the study included Alison Turnbull, PhD, Aaron Milstone, MD, MHS, Christoph Lehmann, MD, and Emily Sydnor, MD, all of Hopkins.

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Related Videos
Jill Holdsworth, MS, CIC, FAPIC, CRCST, NREMT, CHL
Jill Holdsworth, MS, CIC, FAPIC, CRCSR, NREMT, CHL, and Katie Belski, BSHCA, CRCST, CHL, CIS
Baby visiting a pediatric facility  (Adobe Stock 448959249 by Rawpixel.com)
Antimicrobial Resistance (Adobe Stock unknown)
Anne Meneghetti, MD, speaking with Infection Control Today
Patient Safety: Infection Control Today's Trending Topic for March
Infection Control Today® (ICT®) talks with John Kimsey, vice president of processing optimization and customer success for Steris.
Picture at AORN’s International Surgical Conference & Expo 2024
Infection Control Today and Contagion are collaborating for Rare Disease Month.
Related Content