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Antibiotic-Induced Liver Injury in Paediatric Outpatients: A Case-Control Study in Primary Care Databases

Authors :
Ferrajolo, C
Verhamme, K
Trifirò, G
't Jong, G
Picelli, G
Giaquinto, C
Mazzaglia, G
Stricker, B
Rossi, F
Capuano, A
Sturkenboom, M
Ferrajolo C
Verhamme KM
Trifirò G
't Jong GW
Picelli G
Giaquinto C
Mazzaglia G
Stricker BH
Rossi F
Capuano A
Sturkenboom MC.
Ferrajolo, C
Verhamme, K
Trifirò, G
't Jong, G
Picelli, G
Giaquinto, C
Mazzaglia, G
Stricker, B
Rossi, F
Capuano, A
Sturkenboom, M
Ferrajolo C
Verhamme KM
Trifirò G
't Jong GW
Picelli G
Giaquinto C
Mazzaglia G
Stricker BH
Rossi F
Capuano A
Sturkenboom MC.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Introduction: Antibiotics are the most commonly prescribed drug class in children. Real-world data mining on the paediatric population showed potential associations between antibiotic use and acute liver injury. Objective: We assessed risk estimates of liver injury associated with antibiotic use in children and adolescent outpatients. Methods: A large, multi-database, population-based, case-control study was performed in people <18 years of age from two European countries (Italy and The Netherlands) during the period 2000–2008. All potential cases of liver injury were automatically extracted from three databases and then manually validated based on Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences (CIOMS) criteria and by exclusion of all competing causes for liver injury. Up to 100 control participants were sampled for each case and were matched on index date of the event, age, sex and database. Based on prescription data, antibiotic exposure was categorized as current, recent or past use by calculating the time period between the end of prescription and the index date. Multivariate conditional logistic regression analyses were applied to calculate odds ratios (ORs) as a measure of the association (with 95% confidence interval [CI]). Results: We identified 938 cases of liver injury and matched to 93,665 controls. Current use of overall antibiotics is associated with a threefold increased risk of liver injury compared with past use (adjusted OR [ORadj] 3.22, 95% CI 2.57–4.03). With regard to individual antibiotics, the risk is significantly increased for current use of each antibiotic (p < 0.005), except for azithromycin. Risk estimates vary from the lowest ORadj of 1.86 (95% CI 1.08–3.21) for amoxicillin to the highest ORadj of 24.16 (95% CI 11.78–49.54) for cotrimoxazole (i.e. sulphamethoxazole/trimethoprim) and 26.70 (95% CI 12.09–58.96) for ceftriaxone. Sensitivity analyses confirm the associations for ceftriaxone, cotrimoxazole, and clarithromycin. Con

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308928531
Document Type :
Electronic Resource