Variation in Antibiotic Treatment Failure Outcome Definitions in Randomised Trials and Observational Studies of Antibiotic Prescribing Strategies: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Terminology
2.2. Components of Antibiotic Treatment Failure Outcomes
2.3. Respiratory Tract Infections
2.4. Urinary Tract Infections
2.5. Skin and Soft Tissue Infections
3. Discussion
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Search Strategy
4.2. Inclusion Criteria
- (1)
- The population of interest was ambulatory patients seen in primary care or outpatient settings with respiratory tract (RTI), urinary tract (UTI), or skin and soft tissue infection (SSTI);
- (2)
- The comparisons were between antibiotic prescribing strategies—i.e., antibiotic versus antibiotic, or antibiotic versus placebo, or comparison of different doses or duratio ns of antibiotic therapy.
- (3)
- The outcome was antibiotic treatment failure. The exact terminology could vary, but the authors needed to describe an outcome that assessed failure to achieve a desired clinical response following initiation of antibiotics or control.
4.3. Screening and Data Extraction
4.4. Synthesis
5. Conclusions and Implications
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Medline Search Strategy
References
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Study ID and Country | Design | Sample Size | Infection | Intervention and Control | Antibiotic Treatment Failure Definition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ahmed 2019A [13] UK | Retrospective cohort study | N = 33,745 | UTI | 3 days vs. 7 days of antibiotic therapy | Reconsultation for urinary symptoms and a same-day antibiotic prescription within 14 days following the incident UTI, ascertained through clinical and prescription codes recorded in primary care records. |
Ahmed 2019B [14] UK | Retrospective cohort study | N = 42,298 | UTI | Cefalexin, ciprofloxacin, or co-amoxiclav vs. Nitrofurantoin | Reconsultation for urinary symptoms and a same-day antibiotic prescription within 14 days following the incident UTI, ascertained through clinical and prescription codes recorded in primary care records. |
Al-Saadi 2018 [15] Iraq | Retrospective cohort study | N = 120 | Bacterial rhinosinusitis | Ceftriaxone 1 g IM once daily vs. amoxicillin + clavulanic acid 875 mg/125 mg bi-daily for 3–4 days | Persistence of signs and symptoms of acute bacterial rhinosinusitis or complications. |
Ambroggio 2015 [5] USA | Retrospective cohort study | N = 1999 (1164 after matching) | CAP | Beta-lactam monotherapy vs. macrolide monotherapy | Follow-up visit with an ICD-9 code for a respiratory-related diagnosis accompanied by a change in antibiotic therapy either in the outpatient setting (in-person or via phone), in the emergency department, or as a hospital admission within 14 days of the initial diagnosis of CAP. |
Ambroggio 2016 [6] USA | Retrospective cohort study | N = 915 (717 after restricted by propensity score) | CAP | Beta-lactam monotherapy vs. meta-lactam/macrolide therapy | Follow-up visit with an ICD-9 code for a respiratory-related diagnosis accompanied by a change in antibiotic therapy either in the outpatient setting (in-person or via phone), in the emergency department, or as a hospital admission within 14 days of the initial diagnosis of CAP. |
Berni 2016A [16] UK | Retrospective cohort study | N = 7,471,893 | RTIs | Wide range of different antibiotics were compared | Earliest occurrence of any of five events: 1. A different antibiotic dispensed between 1 and 30 days from the last prescription of the antibiotic monotherapy; 2. A GP record of hospitalization with an infection-related diagnostic code within 30 days of antibiotic initiation; 3. A GP referral to a specialist service within 30 days of antibiotic initiation, where the specialty type was infection-related, or the referral had an infection-related diagnostic code; 4. A GP record of an emergency department visit within 3 days of antibiotic initiation; 5. A GP record of death with an infection-related diagnostic code within 30 days of antibiotic initiation. |
Berni 2016B [17] UK | Retrospective cohort study | N = 824,651 | SSTI, and RTI | Wide range of different antibiotics were compared | Earliest occurrence of any of five events: 1. A different antibiotic dispensed between 1 and 30 days from the last prescription of the antibiotic monotherapy; 2. A GP record of hospitalization with an infection-related diagnostic code within 30 days of antibiotic initiation; 3. A GP referral to a specialist service within 30 days of antibiotic initiation, where the specialty type was infection-related, or the referral had an infection-related diagnostic code; 4. A GP record of an emergency department visit within 3 days of antibiotic initiation; 5. A GP record of death with an infection-related diagnostic code within 30 days of antibiotic initiation. |
Blin 2010 [18] France | Prospective cohort study | N = 5640 | Acute sinusitis | Antibiotic prescribed vs. no antibiotic prescribed | Sinus drainage or new antibiotic prescription (switch or initiation) within 10 days. |
Boel 2019 [10] Denmark | Retrospective cohort study | N = 21,864 | UTI | Pivmecillinam 3 days vs. 5 days vs. 7 days | Redemption of any new prescription of antibiotic exclusively for UTIs, redemption of other antibiotic for UTI with specified indication for UTI on the prescription. Or admission to hospital due to UTI within 14 and 30 days. |
Currie 2014 [19] UK | Retrospective cohort study | SSTI N = 2,568,230 URTI N = 4,236,574 LRTI N= 3,148,947 | SSTI, & RTI | Wide range of different antibiotics were compared | Earliest occurrence of any of the following: 1. Prescription of a different antibiotic drug within 30 days of the first-line antibiotic; 2. GP record of admission to hospital with an infection related diagnosis within 30 days of antibiotic initiation; GP referral to an infection related specialist service within 30 days of initiation; 3. GP record of an emergency department visit within three days of initiation (the shorter time window being selected here to increase the probability that the emergency event was related to the infection); 4. Or GP record of death with an infection related diagnostic code within 30 days of initiation. |
Dalen 2018 [20] Canada | Double-blind non-inferiority RCT | N = 206,195 | SSTI | Cephalexin 500 mg QDS vs. cefazolin 2 g IV daily + probenecid 1 g PO daily | Hospital admission, Change in antibiotics (not due to an adverse event), or persistent or worsening signs and symptoms of SSTI following at least 72 h of antibiotic therapy, assessed between 72 and 96 h after antibiotic therapy was initially started in the ED. Hospital admission or a change in antibiotics (not due to an adverse event) <72 h after the initial ED visit also constituted treatment failure. |
Gerber 2017 [21] USA | Retrospective cohort study | N = 30,159 children (19,179 with acute otitis media; 6746, group A streptococcal pharyngitis; and 4234, acute sinusitis) | RTI | Broad spectrum vs. narrow-spectrum antibiotic therapy | Same acute infection diagnosis and a new prescription for a systemic antibiotic reported during an in-person or telephone encounter. If the encounter occurred during the effective duration of the initially prescribed (index) antibiotic course, progress notes were reviewed to distinguish between treatment failure (persistence of symptoms or concern for failure of the index antibiotic) and requirement of a new antibiotic due to an adverse event. Encounters with the same acute respiratory tract infection diagnosis and an antibiotic that occurred after the effective duration of the index antibiotic were considered treatment failures (i.e., recurrence) and did not require confirmatory record reviews. TF was assessed through 14 days as the primary outcome and 30 days after diagnosis. Assessment for TF started 2/7 after diagnosis. |
Greenberg 2014 [22] Israel | Double-blind placebo-controlled RCT | N = 140 (12, 56 and 72 children in the 3-, 5- and 10-day treatment groups respectively) | CAP | 2 stages: 3 days vs. 10 days; 5 days vs. 10 days amoxicillin (80 mg/kg/d; divided into 3 daily doses) | Judged by the study physicians to be nonresponsive or deteriorating to the point that the study drug needed to be replaced; or if the patient was hospitalized due to deterioration in medical condition or no response to the current treatment. Clinical relapse before day 30 was also defined as treatment failure. All arms received identical treatment for the first 3 days, so only failures after day 3 were included in the analysis. |
Haghighi 2010 [23] Iraq | Double-blind RCT | N = 76 | UTI | Ciprofloxacin 250 mg BD 3-days vs. ciprofloxacin 250 mg BD 7 days | Persistence or progression of any clinical UTI signs or symptoms or appearance of new signs or symptoms. |
Hazir 2011 [4] Pakistan | Double-blind randomized placebo-controlled RCT | N = 873 | Non severe pneumonia | Amoxicillin 45 mg/kg/day 3-days vs. placebo | Treatment failure by day 3 = developed lower chest indrawing or any of the general danger signs. Treatment failure days 6–14 = presence of fast breathing, lower chest indrawing, or general danger signs after clinical resolution on day 3. |
Hess 2010 [7] USA | Retrospective cohort study | N = 3994 | CAP | Wide range of different antibiotics were compared | ≥1 of the following events: ≤30 days after index date: a refill for the index antibiotic after completed days of therapy, a different antibiotic dispensed >1 day after the index prescription; or hospitalization with a pneumonia diagnosis or emergency department visit >3 days post-index. |
Huttner 2018 [24] Multi-country | RCT | N = 513 | UTI | Nitrofurantoin 100 mg TDS 5-days vs. fosfomycin 3 g OD single dose | Need for additional or change in antibiotic treatment due to UTI or discontinuation due to lack of efficacy. |
Jehan 2020 [3] Pakistan | Double-blind RCT | N = 4002 | Fast breathing pneumonia | Amoxicillin vs. placebo | Any of the following: Death, WHO-defined danger sign, onset of lower chest indrawing; hospitalization for any reason; and change in study drug by study physician due to new onset comorbid infection or for serious non-fatal antibiotic associated adverse event. Assessed for on days 0, 1, 2, and 3 of randomisation in the morning and evening. |
Kornfalt-Isberg 2020 [25] Sweden | Retrospective cohort study | N = 16,555 | Lower UTI | Narrow spectrum vs. broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy | A new prescription of a different relevant UTI antibiotic within 7 days from index antibiotic prescription and a new registered lower UTI diagnosis. |
Lee 2014 [12] Taiwan | Retrospective cohort study | N = 73,675 | UTI | Wide range of different antibiotics were compared | Either hospitalization or emergency department visits for UTI. |
Lee 2015 [26] Taiwan | Retrospective cohort study | N = 9256 | CAP | Wide range of different antibiotics were compared | Composite of either one of the following events: second antibiotic prescription, hospitalization due to CAP, an emergency department visit with a diagnosis of CAP, or 30-day non-accident-related mortality. |
LinC 2015 [27] Taiwan | Retrospective cohort study | N = 2622 matched-pair episodes | CAP | Fluoroquinolones vs. beta lactams | ≥1 of the following events: prolonged antibiotic use of 14 days or more, a second antibiotic added from a different class other than the index drug, and a change from oral antibiotics to injected medication. |
LinKY 2015 [28] Taiwan | Retrospective cohort study | N = 2592 | CAP | Fluoroquinolones vs. β-lactam/β-lactamase inhibitors | Prolonged antibiotic treatment for more than 14 days; change or addition of another antibiotic different from study medication; switch from oral antibiotics to intravenous antibiotics. |
Lin 2017 [11] Taiwan | Retrospective cohort study | N = 2434 | UTI | Generic vs. branded antibiotic formulations | An ER visit or hospitalization due to a UTI with antibiotic prescription within 42 days of the index consultation; and an additional outpatient visit for a UTI requiring antibiotic treatment within 42 days of the completion of the original antibiotic therapy. |
Llop 2017 [8] USA | Retrospective cohort study | N = 441,820 outpatients | CAP | Any oral fluroquinolone, macrolide, or beta-lactam monotherapy | 30-day rate of treatment switch: Switch in drug class after the index window, accompanied by a second CAP diagnosis within the range of 3 days prior to and 5 days following the switch), and the rate of CAP-related hospitalizations (patients with a primary diagnosis of CAP when admitted to hospital) in the 30 days following the initiation of outpatient treatment. |
Moran 2017 [29] USA | RCT | N = 500 | SSTI | Cephalexin + trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole vs. cephalexin + placebo | Fever; increase in erythema (>25%), swelling, or tenderness (days 3–4); no decrease in erythema, swelling, or tenderness (days 8–10); and more than minimal erythema, swelling, or tenderness (days 14–21). |
Pujades-Rodriguez 2019 [30] UK | Retrospective cohort study | N = 494,675 UTIs (300,354 patients) | UTI | Trimethoprim, co-amoxiclav, pivmecillinam, or nitrofurantoin | Antibiotic re-prescription—earliest prescription of a UTI-specific antibiotic for the same UTI episode between 4 and 28 days after the date of the initial antibiotic prescription. |
Rajesh 2013 [31] India | RCT | N = 240 | CAP | Amoxicillin 40 mg/kg/day in vs. co-trimoxazole 8 mg/kg/day or trimethoprim | Occurrence of any signs of WHO-defined severe pneumonia; increase in respiratory rate more than 10 breaths per min above base line and respiratory rate more than 70 per min for children 2 months to 1 year of age or more than 60 per min for children between 1 year and 5 years of age. Assessed after 2 and 5 days. |
Sadruddin 2019 [32] Pakistan | Unblinded cluster RCT | N = 15,749 | Fast-breathing pneumonia | Amoxicillin vs. co-trimoxazole | Death; appearance of any danger sign (unable to drink/breastfeed, convulsions, vomits everything, abnormally sleepy/difficult to wake) up to day 4 in intervention-cluster patients or day 6 in control-cluster patients; appearance of lower chest indrawing anytime up to day 4 or 6; change of antibiotic (through self-referral or by caregivers) anytime up to day 4 in intervention-cluster patients or day 6 in control-cluster patients; or fast breathing (respiratory rate ≥50 breaths per minute) on day 4 in intervention clusters or day 6 in control clusters. |
Singh 2015 [33] Canada | Retrospective cohort study | N = 191,857 | UTI | 14 days following prescription of an antibiotic: receipt of a second antibiotic indicated for urinary tract infection; and hospital presentation (either an emergency department visit or hospital admission) with a urinary tract infection. | |
Ten Doesschate 2019 [34] The Netherlands | Retrospective cohort study | N = 58,709 episodes in 36,439 patients | UTI | Nitrofurantoin 5 days, fosfomycin 1 day, and trimethoprim 3 days or 7 days | New antibiotic prescription for cystitis or pyelonephritis, combined with an ICPC code for urinary tract infections. |
Ten Doesschate 2020 [35] The Netherlands | Retrospective cohort study | N = 42,473 episodes in 21,891 patients | UTI | Nitrofurantoin 5 days, Fosfomycin 1 day and Trimethoprim 3 days or 7 days | Second antibiotic prescription for cystitis or pyelonephritis within 28 days post-prescription. |
Tillotson 2020 [9] USA | Retrospective cohort study | N = 251,947 | CAP | Fluoroquinolone, macrolides, beta-lactam, or tetracycline | ≥1 of the following events within 30 days of initial antibiotic: Antibiotic refill, antibiotic switch, emergency-room visit, or hospitalization. |
Vandepitte 2015 [36] Thailand | Prospective observational study | N = 209 enrolled | URTI | Wide range of different antibiotics were compared to no antibiotics | No clinical improvement, or worsening. |
Vilas-Boas 2014 [37] Brazil | RCT (triple-blinded and single centre) | N = 820 | Non-severe pneumonia | Amoxicillin twice daily vs. three times daily | Development of danger signs, persistence of fever, tachypnoea, development of serious adverse reactions, death, and withdrawal from the trial. Recurrence of fever and previously defined as TF included for secondary outcome TF definition. Failure rate measured at 48 h and 5–14 days after enrolment. |
Williams 2011 [38] USA | Retrospective cohort study | N = 41,094 | SSTI | Clindamycin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and β-lactam | An SSTI within 14 days after the incident SSTI. |
Study ID | Clinical Condition Definition Components |
---|---|
Berni 2016 | Death with infection related diagnostic code within 30 days |
Currie 2014 | Death with infection related diagnostic code within 30 days |
Dalen 2018 | Persistent/worsening symptoms within 72–96 h after starting treatment |
Moran 2017 | Fever; increase in erythema (>25%), swelling, or tenderness (days 3–4); no decrease in erythema, swelling, or tenderness (days 8–10); and more than minimal erythema, swelling, or tenderness (days 14–21) |
Williams 2011 | An SSTI within 14 days after index SSTI |
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Neill, R.; Gillespie, D.; Ahmed, H. Variation in Antibiotic Treatment Failure Outcome Definitions in Randomised Trials and Observational Studies of Antibiotic Prescribing Strategies: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis. Antibiotics 2022, 11, 627. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11050627
Neill R, Gillespie D, Ahmed H. Variation in Antibiotic Treatment Failure Outcome Definitions in Randomised Trials and Observational Studies of Antibiotic Prescribing Strategies: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis. Antibiotics. 2022; 11(5):627. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11050627
Chicago/Turabian StyleNeill, Rebecca, David Gillespie, and Haroon Ahmed. 2022. "Variation in Antibiotic Treatment Failure Outcome Definitions in Randomised Trials and Observational Studies of Antibiotic Prescribing Strategies: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis" Antibiotics 11, no. 5: 627. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11050627
APA StyleNeill, R., Gillespie, D., & Ahmed, H. (2022). Variation in Antibiotic Treatment Failure Outcome Definitions in Randomised Trials and Observational Studies of Antibiotic Prescribing Strategies: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis. Antibiotics, 11(5), 627. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11050627