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Prolonged antibiotics for purulent bronchiectasis in children and adultsEvans DJ, Bara A, Greenstone M SummaryProlonged antibiotics for purulent bronchiectasis in children and adultsThe available evidence examining the use of prolonged antibiotic therapy in bronchiectasis suggests that this intervention incurs a small advantage. The evidence is derived from a small number of diverse trials and further research is needed to confirm this effect. Antibiotic resistance remains a concern.
This is a Cochrane review abstract and plain language summary, prepared and maintained by The Cochrane Collaboration, currently published in The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010 Issue 1, Copyright © 2010 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.. The full text of the review is available in The Cochrane Library (ISSN 1464-780X).
This version first published online:
October 20. 2003 AbstractBackgroundThe vicious cycle hypothesis for bronchiectasis predicts that bacterial colonisation of the respiratory tract perpetuates inflammatory change. This damages the mucociliary escalator preventing bacterial clearance and allowing the persistence of pro-inflammatory mediators. Conventional treatment with physiotherapy and intermittent antibiotics are felt to improve the condition of bronchiectasis patients although there are no conclusive data showing that these interventions influence the natural history of the condition. Various strategies have been tried to interrupt this cycle of infection and inflammation and one of these is to prolong antibiotic treatment in the hope of allowing the airway mucosa to heal. ObjectivesThis systematic review brings together the evidence and where possible presents a meta-analysis of the data available to answer the question 'Does treatment with prolonged courses of antibiotics influence the outcome in purulent bronchiectasis?' Search strategyThe Cochrane Airways Group trials register and reference lists of identified articles were searched. Searches were current as of January 2008. Selection criteriaRandomised trials looking at the use of prolonged antibiotic therapy in the treatment of bronchiectasis compared with either placebo or usual care. Data collection and analysisTrial quality was assessed and data extraction was carried out by the reviewers independently. Study authors were contacted for missing information. Main resultsNine trials met the inclusion criteria, recruiting a total of 378 participants. Antibiotics were given for between 4 weeks and one year. Only limited meta-analysis was possible due to the diversity of outcomes in the trials. Response rates showed significant effects in favour of prolonged antibiotic treatment (Peto OR (95% CI), 3.37 (1.60 to 7.09)). Conversely for exacerbation rates there was no significant difference between prolonged antibiotics and placebo (Peto OR (95% CI), 0.96 (0.27 to 3.46)). For withdrawals there was no significant difference between treatment and placebo management (Peto OR (95% CI), 1.06 (0.42 to 2.65)). Data for lung function showed no significant benefit in favour of antibiotic treatment (% predicted FEV1 mean difference -1.05 % (95% CI -6.93 to 4.83)). Authors' conclusionsThe evidence available shows a small benefit for the use of prolonged antibiotics in the treatment of bronchiectasis. This review is limited by the diversity of the trials. Further randomised controlled trials with adequate power and standardised end points are required. |