Impact Assessment of a Decision Rule for Using Antibiotics in Pneumonia: A Randomized Trial

Category Primary study
JournalPEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGY
Year 2014
Background: Although more than half of the cases of pneumonia in children can be due to virus, most of them receive antibiotic treatment. A previously published clinical prediction rule bacterial pneumonia score (BPS) allows the identification of children with pneumonia who do not require antibiotics, but its impact has not been evaluated. We assessed whether the use of the BPS for the initial management of patients with pneumonia results in decreasing the use of antibiotics than under standard management of this condition without increasing patients' risks. Methods: This was a randomized, parallel-group, observer-blind, controlled clinical trial comparing the use of antibiotics in children aged 3-60 months treated for pneumonia in an outpatient setting, according to two methods of initial management. Patients were assigned randomly to management according to the BPS (antibiotic indication with a BPS >= 4 points) or routine management (antibiotic indication based on the institutional guidelines). We calculated the proportion of the use of antibiotics in each group and evaluated each patient's clinical outcome. Results: We included 120 patients (60 BPS and 60 controls) with a mean age of 24.2 + 14.1 months. The use of antibiotics was significantly lower in the BPS group (46.6% vs. 86.6; OR 0.13; 95% CI: 0.05-0.35; P < 0.001). We observed an unfavorable outcome in 10 patients (8.3%), 5 in each group (P = 1.0; OR: 1.0 95% CI: 0.2-3.6). Conclusion: The use of antibiotics was significantly lower in the group managed according to the BPS compared to the conventionally treated group, without increasing the rate of treatment failure. (C) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Epistemonikos ID: 0c4848b6a643787aa9770ca93220d6a70c2fc26d
First added on: May 08, 2022