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- Darrell Sutijono, Jeffrey Hom, and Shahriar Zehtabchi.
- Department of Emergency Medicine, Kaiser Permanente Santa Clara Medical Center, Santa Clara, California 95051, USA. sutijono@cal.berkeley.edu
- Eur J Emerg Med. 2011 Oct 1;18(5):244-50.
AbstractPneumonia is the leading cause of mortality in young children in developing countries. A short course of antibiotics in the treatment of nonsevere pneumonia has been suggested as feasible and could lead to decreased costs, risk of adverse events, and development of antimicrobial resistance. This review evaluates the evidence regarding the duration of antibiotic treatment in this population. The PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, and other databases were searched. Studies were selected for inclusion if they enrolled patients in developing countries between the ages of 2 months to 18 years clinically diagnosed with nonsevere pneumonia, and compared the clinical outcomes of a short course of oral antibiotics with a long course. The outcomes of interest included failure rate, relapse rate, and safety. Four randomized controlled trials were identified, which enrolled 9235 patients cumulatively. All patients were aged between 2 to 59 months and diagnosed using World Health Organization defined criteria. All four trials showed no significant difference in relapse rates between 3-day and 5-day courses. In one study, the 3-day course was associated with higher rates of treatment failure and adverse events, with no adverse event classified as severe. Overall, short and long courses of antibiotics produce similar outcomes treating clinically diagnosed, nonsevere pneumonia in children in developing countries between the ages of 2 to 59 months. Three out of four studies in this review, representing two-thirds of the patients in aggregate, showed no significant difference in treatment failure or relapse rates between a 3-day and 5-day course of antibiotics.© 2011 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
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