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Duration of intravenous antibiotic therapy for children with acute osteomyelitis or septic arthritis:a feasibility study

Authors :
Priya Sukhtankar
Hans de Graaf
Carrol Gamble
Delane Shingadia
Philip Henman
Catherine Spowart
Kate Armon
Nusreen Ahmad
Paula R Williamson
A. Pallett
Barbara Arch
Saul N. Faust
Marieke Emonts
Scott Hackett
Helen Hickey
Annmarie Jeanes
Adam Finn
Stuart C. Clarke
Amanda Lees
Peter Marsh
Mike Sharland
Claire Ballinger
Andrew J. Pollard
Andrew Riordan
Abigail Bennett
Colin Powell
Jethro Herberg
Nicholas Clarke
Source :
de Graaf, H, Sukhtankar, P, Arch, B, Ahmad, N, Lees, A, Bennett, A, Spowart, C, Hickey, H, Jeanes, A, Armon, K, Riordan, A, Herberg, J, Hackett, S, Gamble, C, Shingadia, D, Pallett, A, Clarke, S C, Henman, P, Emonts, M, Sharland, M, Finn, A, Pollard, A J, Powell, C, Marsh, P, Ballinger, C, Williamson, P R, Clarke, N M & Faust, S N 2017, ' Duration of intravenous antibiotic therapy for children with acute osteomyelitis or septic arthritis : a feasibility study ', Health Technology Assessment, vol. 21, no. 48, pp. 1-164 . https://doi.org/10.3310/hta21480, Health Technology Assessment, Vol 21, Iss 48 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

BackgroundThere is little current consensus regarding the route or duration of antibiotic treatment for acute osteomyelitis (OM) and septic arthritis (SA) in children.ObjectiveTo assess the overall feasibility and inform the design of a future randomised controlled trial (RCT) to reduce the duration of intravenous (i.v.) antibiotic use in paediatric OM and SA.Design(1) A prospective service evaluation (cohort study) to determine the current disease spectrum and UK clinical practice in paediatric OM/SA; (2) a prospective cohort substudy to assess the use of targeted polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in diagnosing paediatric OM/SA; (3) a qualitative study to explore families’ views and experiences of OM/SA; and (4) the development of a core outcome set via a systematic review of literature, Delphi clinician survey and stakeholder consensus meeting.SettingForty-four UK secondary and tertiary UK centres (service evaluation).ParticipantsChildren with OM/SA.InterventionsPCR diagnostics were compared with culture as standard of care. Semistructured interviews were used in the qualitative study.ResultsData were obtained on 313 cases of OM/SA, of which 218 (61.2%) were defined as simple disease and 95 (26.7%) were defined as complex disease. The epidemiology of paediatric OM/SA in this study was consistent with existing European data. Children who met oral switch criteria less than 7 days from starting i.v. antibiotics were less likely to experience treatment failure (9.6%) than children who met oral switch criteria after 7 days of i.v. therapy (16.1% when switch was between 1 and 2 weeks; 18.2% when switch was > 2 weeks). In 24 out of 32 simple cases (75%) and 8 out of 12 complex cases (67%) in which the targeted PCR was used, a pathogen was detected. The qualitative study demonstrated the importance to parents and children of consideration of short- and long-term outcomes meaningful to families themselves. The consensus meeting agreed on the following outcomes: rehospitalisation or recurrence of symptoms while on oral antibiotics, recurrence of infection, disability at follow-up, symptom free at 1 year, limb shortening or deformity, chronic OM or arthritis, amputation or fasciotomy, death, need for paediatric intensive care, and line infection. Oral switch criteria were identified, including resolution of fever for ≥ 48 hours, tolerating oral food and medicines, and pain improvement.LimitationsData were collected in a 6-month period, which might not have been representative, and follow-up data for long-term complications are limited.ConclusionsA future RCT would need to recruit from all tertiary and most secondary UK hospitals. Clinicians have implemented early oral switch for selected patients with simple disease without formal clinical trial evidence of safety. However, the current criteria by which decisions to make the oral switch are made are not clearly established or evidence based.Future workA RCT in simple OM and SA comparing shorter- or longer-course i.v. therapy is feasible in children randomised after oral switch criteria are met after 7 days of i.v. therapy, excluding children meeting oral switch criteria in the first week of i.v. therapy. This study design meets clinician preferences and addresses parental concerns not to randomise prior to oral switch criteria being met.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13665278 and 20464924
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
de Graaf, H, Sukhtankar, P, Arch, B, Ahmad, N, Lees, A, Bennett, A, Spowart, C, Hickey, H, Jeanes, A, Armon, K, Riordan, A, Herberg, J, Hackett, S, Gamble, C, Shingadia, D, Pallett, A, Clarke, S C, Henman, P, Emonts, M, Sharland, M, Finn, A, Pollard, A J, Powell, C, Marsh, P, Ballinger, C, Williamson, P R, Clarke, N M & Faust, S N 2017, ' Duration of intravenous antibiotic therapy for children with acute osteomyelitis or septic arthritis : a feasibility study ', Health Technology Assessment, vol. 21, no. 48, pp. 1-164 . https://doi.org/10.3310/hta21480, Health Technology Assessment, Vol 21, Iss 48 (2017)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b8c1b3f6eab31391034c6ec315b45c9d