减少儿童急性咳嗽和呼吸道感染抗生素处方的多方面干预:CHICO 群组 RCT。

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Peter S Blair, Grace J Young, Clare Clement, Padraig Dixon, Penny Seume, Jenny Ingram, Jodi Taylor, Jeremy Horwood, Patricia J Lucas, Christie Cabral, Nick A Francis, Elizabeth Beech, Martin Gulliford, Sam Creavin, Janet A Lane, Scott Bevan, Alastair D Hay
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:基层医疗机构对呼吸道感染患儿预后的临床不确定性导致了抗生素的不必要使用。更好地识别未来住院风险较低的儿童可能会减少临床不确定性。美国国家健康与护理研究所资助的一项为期 5 年的计划(RP-PG-0608-10018)用于开发一项干预措施并对其进行可行性测试:急性咳嗽患儿随机对照试验旨在减少急性咳嗽和呼吸道感染患儿的抗生素处方,同时不增加入院率:设计:一项高效、务实的开放标签双臂试验(包含定性分析和卫生经济学分析),以常规收集的数据为主要结果,采用实践层面的随机方法:参与者:英格兰的全科医生诊所:使用 Egton Medical Information Systems® 患者记录系统的全科医生诊所,治疗 0-9 岁患有咳嗽或上呼吸道感染的儿童。由临床研究网络和临床委托小组招募:干预措施:包括(1)在咨询过程中征询家长的意见;(2)以临床医生为中心的预后算法,以确定急性咳嗽和呼吸道感染患儿在未来 30 天内住院的风险较低、一般或较高,并提供处方指导;(3)为照护者提供打印输出,包括安全网建议:主要结果测量:以 0-9 岁儿童的诊所名单大小为分母的共同主要结果:NHS 业务服务管理局 ePACT2 提供的各诊所阿莫西林和大环内酯类药物的配药率(优势比较)和临床委员会小组提供的呼吸道感染入院率(非优势比较),两者均在 12 个月内常规收集:在所需的 310 家诊所中,有 294 家(95%)被纳入(144 家干预诊所和 150 家对照诊所),登记在册的 0-9 岁儿童有 336496 名(占英格兰所有 0-9 岁儿童的 5%),这些诊所来自 47 个临床委员会。纳入研究的诊所规模略大于未纳入研究的诊所,基线配药率略低,且位于较贫困地区(反映了全国诊所邮政编码的分布情况)。有 12 家诊所(4%)随后退出(其中 6 家与大流行病有关)。在 12 个月内,每家诊所使用干预措施的次数中位数为 70 次(由 9 名临床医生使用)。没有证据表明,干预诊所的抗生素配药率[0.155(95% 置信区间 0.135 至 0.179)]与对照诊所有差异[0.154(95% 置信区间 0.130 至 0.182),相对风险= 1.011(95% 置信区间 0.992 至 1.029);P = 0.253]。总体而言,大流行期间的配药水平和干预措施使用率都有所下降。与对照组[0.021(95% 置信区间 0.014 至 0.029)]相比,干预组的呼吸道感染住院率[0.019(95% 置信区间 0.014 至 0.026)]不低于对照组[相对风险 = 0.952(95% 置信区间 0.905 至 1.003)]。定性评估发现,临床医生喜欢这种干预措施,并将其作为一种辅助工具,尤其是在处理边缘病例时,但这种干预措施并不总是能很好地融入会诊流程,而且随着时间的推移,这种干预措施的使用率越来越低。经济评估发现,没有证据表明不同干预措施的平均国民健康服务成本存在差异;平均差异为-1999英镑(95%置信区间为-6627-2630英镑):结论:该干预措施是可行的,对从业人员主观上也是有用的,没有证据表明会对住院率造成损害,但对抗生素处方率没有影响:尽管该干预措施似乎并未改变处方行为,但在设计未来的干预措施时可采用该方法的要素:本试验注册为 ISRCTN11405239(指定日期为 2018 年 4 月 20 日),网址为 www.controlled-trials.com(访问日期为 2022 年 9 月 5 日)。协议的 4.0 版本可在以下网址获取:https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/(2022 年 9 月 5 日访问)。资金来源:该奖项由美国国家研究所资助:该奖项由国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)健康技术评估(NIHR奖项编号:16/31/98)计划资助,全文发表于《健康技术评估》;第27卷,第32期。如需了解更多奖项信息,请参阅 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A multifaceted intervention to reduce antibiotic prescribing among CHIldren with acute COugh and respiratory tract infection: the CHICO cluster RCT.

Background: Clinical uncertainty in primary care regarding the prognosis of children with respiratory tract infections contributes to the unnecessary use of antibiotics. Improved identification of children at low risk of future hospitalisation might reduce clinical uncertainty. A National Institute for Health and Care Research-funded 5-year programme (RP-PG-0608-10018) was used to develop and feasibility test an intervention.

Objectives: The aim of the children with acute cough randomised controlled trial was to reduce antibiotic prescribing among children presenting with acute cough and respiratory tract infection without increasing hospital admission.

Design: An efficient, pragmatic open-label, two-arm trial (with embedded qualitative and health economic analyses) using practice-level randomisation using routinely collected data as the primary outcome.

Setting: General practitioner practices in England.

Participants: General practitioner practices using the Egton Medical Information Systems® patient-record system for children aged 0-9 years presenting with a cough or upper respiratory tract infection. Recruited by Clinical Research Networks and Clinical Commissioning Groups.

Intervention: Comprised: (1) elicitation of parental concerns during consultation; (2) a clinician-focused prognostic algorithm to identify children with acute cough and respiratory tract infection at low, average or elevated risk of hospitalisation in the next 30 days accompanied by prescribing guidance, (3) provision of a printout for carers including safety-netting advice.

Main outcome measures: Co-primaries using the practice list-size for children aged 0-9 years as the denominator: rate of dispensed amoxicillin and macrolide items at each practice (superiority comparison) from NHS Business Services Authority ePACT2 and rate of hospital admission for respiratory tract infection (non-inferiority comparison) from Clinical Commissioning Groups, both routinely collected over 12 months.

Results: Of the 310 practices required, 294 (95%) were recruited (144 intervention and 150 controls) with 336,496 registered 0-9-year-olds (5% of all 0-9-year-old children in England) from 47 Clinical Commissioning Groups. Included practices were slightly larger than those not included, had slightly lower baseline dispensing rates and were located in more deprived areas (reflecting the distribution for practice postcodes nationally). Twelve practices (4%) subsequently withdrew (six related to the pandemic). The median number of times the intervention was used was 70 per practice (by a median of 9 clinicians) over 12 months. There was no evidence that the antibiotic dispensing rate in the intervention practices [0.155 (95% confidence interval 0.135 to 0.179)] differed to controls [0.154 (95% confidence interval 0.130 to 0.182), relative risk= 1.011 (95% confidence interval 0.992 to 1.029); p = 0.253]. There was, overall, a reduction in dispensing levels and intervention usage during the pandemic. The rate of hospitalisation for respiratory tract infection in the intervention practices [0.019 (95% confidence interval 0.014 to 0.026)] compared to the controls [0.021 (95% confidence interval 0.014 to 0.029)] was non-inferior [relative risk = 0.952 (95% confidence interval 0.905 to 1.003)]. The qualitative evaluation found the clinicians liked the intervention, used it as a supportive aid, especially with borderline cases but that it, did not always integrate well within the consultation flow and was used less over time. The economic evaluation found no evidence of a difference in mean National Health Service costs between arms; mean difference -£1999 (95% confidence interval -£6627 to 2630).

Conclusions: The intervention was feasible and subjectively useful to practitioners, with no evidence of harm in terms of hospitalisations, but did not impact on antibiotic prescribing rates.

Future work and limitations: Although the intervention does not appear to change prescribing behaviour, elements of the approach may be used in the design of future interventions.

Trial registration: This trial is registered as ISRCTN11405239 (date assigned 20 April 2018) at www.controlled-trials.com (accessed 5 September 2022). Version 4.0 of the protocol is available at: https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/ (accessed 5 September 2022).

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment (NIHR award ref: 16/31/98) programme and is published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 27, No. 32. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

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来源期刊
Health technology assessment
Health technology assessment 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) publishes research information on the effectiveness, costs and broader impact of health technologies for those who use, manage and provide care in the NHS.
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