MEDICATIONS: CHILDREN OVERPRESCRIBED
ANTIBIOTICS FOR SORE THROAT
Nov. 10, 2005 — Physicians prescribe antibiotics for more than half of
children with sore throat, exceeding the expected prevalence of strep throat,
and used nonrecommended antibiotics for 27 percent of children who received an
antibiotic prescription, according to a study in the November 9 issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
Pharyngitis (inflammation of the throat) accounts for 6 percent of visits by
children to family medicine physicians and pediatricians, according to
background information in the article. The most common manifestation of acute
pharyngitis is sore throat. The main bacterial cause of sore throat and the only
common cause of sore throat warranting antibiotic treatment is group A
beta-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS). GABHS are cultured from 15 percent to 36
percent of children with sore throat. To improve diagnostic accuracy and reduce
unnecessary antibiotic treatment, it is recommended that a GABHS test be
conducted prior to treating children with an antibiotic. Penicillin is the
recommended antibiotic, but acceptable alternatives include amoxicillin,
erythromycin (for penicillin-allergic patients), and first-generation
cephalosporins.
Jeffrey A. Linder, M.D., M.P.H., of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, Boston, and colleagues conducted a study to determine the change
in the rate and type of antibiotics prescribed to children with a chief
complaint of sore throat, and the frequency of GABHS testing. The researchers
used data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and the
National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) from 1995 to 2003. The
study included an analysis of visits by children aged 3 to 17 years with sore
throat to office-based physicians, hospital outpatient departments, and
emergency departments (n=4,158), and of a subset of visits with GABHS testing
data (n=2,797).
The researchers found that physicians prescribed antibiotics in 53 percent of
an estimated 7.3 million annual visits for sore throat and nonrecommended
antibiotics to 27 percent of children who received an antibiotic. Antibiotic
prescribing decreased from 66 percent of visits in 1995 to 54 percent of visits
in 2003. This decrease was attributable to a decrease in the prescribing of
recommended antibiotics (49 percent to 38 percent). Physicians performed a GABHS
test in 53 percent of visits and in 51 percent of visits at which an antibiotic
was prescribed. GABHS testing was not associated with a lower antibiotic
prescribing rate overall (48 percent tested vs. 51 percent not tested), but
testing was associated with a lower antibiotic prescribing rate for children
with diagnosis codes for pharyngitis, tonsillitis, and streptococcal sore throat
(57 percent tested vs. 73 percent not tested).
"In conclusion, we found that physicians prescribed antibiotics less
frequently over time to children with sore throat. However, the overall
antibiotic prescribing rate continues to exceed the expected prevalence of
GABHS, and physicians continue to select unnecessarily broad-spectrum
antibiotics. Unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions are not benign: they increase
the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, expose patients to adverse drug
events, and increase costs. Perhaps unique among upper respiratory tract
infections, clinicians have good, objective criteria in the form of GABHS
testing to guide the antibiotic treatment of children with sore throat. Limiting
antibiotic prescribing to children with a positive GABHS test result is a
feasible goal for primary care physicians and an important step toward judicious
use of antibiotics overall," the authors write.
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