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Trends in Antibiotic Use by Birth Season and Birth Year

Authors :
Christina D. Mack
Henrik Toft Sørensen
Alan C Kinlaw
Til Stürmer
Trine Frøslev
Michael D. Kappelman
Lars Pedersen
Jennifer L. Lund
Julie L. Daniels
Source :
Kinlaw, A C, Sturmer, T, Lund, J L, Pedersen, L, Kappelman, M D, Daniels, J L, Froslev, T, Mack, C D & Sorensen, H T 2017, ' Trends in Antibiotic Use by Birth Season and Birth Year ', Pediatrics, vol. 140, no. 3, 20170441 . https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2017-0441
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2017.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We examined 2 birth cohort effects on antibiotic prescribing during the first year of life (henceforth, infancy) in Denmark: (1) the birth season effect on timing and overall occurrence of antibiotic prescribing, and (2) the birth year effect amid emerging nationwide pneumococcal vaccination programs and changing prescribing guidelines. METHODS: We linked data for all live births in Denmark from 2004 to 2012 (N = 561 729) across the National Health Service Prescription Database, Medical Birth Registry, and Civil Registration System. Across birth season and birth year cohorts, we estimated 1-year risk, rate, and burden of redeemed antibiotic prescriptions during infancy. We used interrupted time series methods to assess prescribing trends across birth year cohorts. Graphical displays of all birth cohort effect data are included. RESULTS: The 1-year risk of having at least 1 redeemed antibiotic prescription during infancy was 39.5% (99% confidence interval [CI]: 39.3% to 39.6%). The hazard of a first prescription increased with age throughout infancy and varied by season; subsequently, Kaplan-Meier–derived risk functions varied by birth season cohort. After rollout of a first vaccination program and new antibiotic prescribing guidelines, 1-year risk decreased by 4.4% over 14 months (99% CI: 3.4% to 5.5%); it decreased again after rollout of a second vaccination program by 6.9% over 3 years (99% CI: 4.4% to 9.3%). CONCLUSIONS: In Denmark, birth season and birth year cohort effects influenced timing and risk of antibiotic prescribing during infancy. Future studies of antibiotic stewardship, effectiveness, and safety in children should consider these cohort effects, which may render some children inherently more susceptible than others to downstream antibiotic effects.

Details

ISSN :
10984275 and 00314005
Volume :
140
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....adeebbd07b6468fd1e4fa977935efee2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2017-0441