英格兰初级保健中按年龄和性别划分的抗生素处方模式的观察性研究:为什么我们需要考虑这种差异来评估抗生素管理和预测抗菌素耐药性变化。

IF 3.7 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance Pub Date : 2025-02-07 eCollection Date: 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1093/jacamr/dlae210
Naomi R Waterlow, Tom Ashfield, Gwenan M Knight
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:抗菌素耐药性(AMR)的驱动因素可能因人口统计学的不同而有很大差异。然而,关于抗生素使用(ABU)如何随年龄和性别而变化的完整、公开、全国性的详细数据很少。在这里,我们的目的是描述ABU的变化,并考虑这些年龄和性别特异性模式如何影响AMR控制的目标和方法。方法:在国家和综合护理委员会(ICB)层面分析2015-23年英国全科医院按5岁年龄组和性别分类的所有抗生素处方。对按年龄和性别分列的ABU相对比率进行了描述性分析,随后对不同地区处方水平的比较指标进行了评估。将年龄和性别的ABU与全球AWaRe目标进行比较,并将年龄组ABU与流感疫苗接种相关,以评估此类疫苗对ABU的影响。结果:在9年的244978795张处方中,女性占63%,其中阿莫西林、呋喃妥因和氟氯西林钠的处方最多。每10万人的处方在性别、年龄、地理区域、季节、年份、COVID-19大流行期和药物方面存在很大差异。大多数抗生素给大多数年龄段的女性开出的处方更多(84%的抗生素给50%年龄段的女性开出的处方更多)。我们展示了这种差异如何需要一种更细致入微的方法来比较不同地区的ABU,并强调AWaRe目标并没有统一实现[在11-20岁的男性中开处方并没有实现获取、观察和储备(AWaRe) 80%的获取目标]。我们还显示了时间敏感中断对ABU的影响(38%的抗生素在没有中断的情况下显示季节性模式),包括针对年龄的不同流感疫苗接种,COVID-19限制以及由于a组链球菌爆发导致的阿莫西林短缺。然而,我们发现很少有公开数据将年龄和性别特异性ABU与相关AMR联系起来。结论:英国各地ABU的这些详细差异表明,AMR负担在年龄和性别方面应该存在很大差异。现在需要将这些ABU数据与类似详细的开放获取AMR数据联系起来,以便更好地进行干预设计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Observational study of antibiotic prescribing patterns by age and sex in primary care in England: why we need to take this variation into account to evaluate antibiotic stewardship and predict AMR variation.

Background: The drivers of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) likely vary substantially by different demographics. However, few complete, open, national detailed data exist on how antibiotic use (ABU) varies by both age and sex. Here, we aimed to describe the variation in ABU and consider how these age- and sex-specific patterns influence targets and methods for AMR control.

Methods: Prescriptions of all antibiotics from general practices in England for 2015-23 disaggregated by 5 year age bands and sex were analysed at the national and Integrated Care Board (ICB) level. A descriptive analysis of the relative rates of ABU by age and sex was conducted, followed by an evaluation of comparison metrics of prescription levels between regions. ABU by age and sex were compared with global AWaRe targets, and ABU by age-group was correlated against influenza vaccination introduction, to evaluate the impact of such vaccines on ABU.

Results: From a total of 249 578 795 prescriptions (across 9 years), 63% were given to women and the most prescribed were amoxicillin, nitrofurantoin and flucloxacillin sodium. Prescriptions per 100 000 population varied substantially across sex, age, geographical region, season, year, COVID-19 pandemic period and drug. Most antibiotics were prescribed more to women across most age bands (84% of antibiotics had more prescriptions to females across 50% of age bands). We show how this variation requires a more nuanced approach to comparing ABU across geographies and highlight that AWaRe targets are not met uniformly [prescribing in men aged 11-20 does not fulfil the Access, Watch and Reserve (AWaRe) 80% Access target]. We also show the impact on ABU of time-sensitive interruptions (38% of antibiotics showed a seasonal pattern in the absence of disruptions), including differential age-targeted influenza vaccination, COVID-19 restrictions and a shortage of amoxicillin due to a group A Streptococcus outbreak. However, we found few open data to link age- and sex-specific ABU to relevant AMR.

Conclusions: These detailed differences in ABU across England suggest that there should be large variation in AMR burden by age and sex. Linkage of this ABU data with similarly detailed open-access AMR data is now needed for better intervention design.

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