• Postgraduate medicine · Jun 2020

    Reduced antibiotic use after initial treatment of acute respiratory infections with phytopharmaceuticals- a retrospective cohort study.

    • David Martin, Marcel Konrad, Charles Christian Adarkwah, and Karel Kostev.
    • Integrative and Anthroposophic Medicine, University of Witten/Herdecke , Witten, Germany.
    • Postgrad Med. 2020 Jun 1; 132 (5): 412-418.

    ObjectivesWe examined the relationship between the initial treatment of acute lower and upper tract respiratory infections with phytopharmaceuticals and the duration of the disease as well as between the initial treatment and the use of antibiotics in the further course of the disease.MethodOutpatients from the IMS® Disease Analyzer database with diagnoses of acute respiratory infections between January 2015 and March 2019 were observed for 30 days. Patients who had been prescribed phytopharmaceuticals on the day of their diagnosis were matched with controls who had not received such prescriptions by treating practice, diagnosis, age, sex, insurance status, index year, and Charlson comorbidity score. Patients antibiotic precriptions on the day of diagnosis were excluded. Logistic regression was used to investigate the relationship between phytopharmaceutical prescription, antibiotic prescription in the further course of the disease, and duration of sick leave.ResultsA total of 117,182 patients who had been prescribed phytopharmaceuticals and an equal number of controls were available for analysis. Phytotherapeutics were associated with fewer antibiotic prescriptions. Extract of Pelargonium sidoides root (odds ratio (OR) 0.49 [0.43-0.57]) and thyme extract (OR 0.62 [0.49-0.76]) exhibited the strongest effect among patients treated by general practitioners, while Pelargonium sidoides root extract (OR 0.57 [0.38-0.84]), thyme and ivy extract (OR 0.66 [0.60-0.73]), and thyme and primrose root extract (OR 0.67 [0.47-0.96]) proved most effective in pediatric patients. Patients receiving phytopharmaceuticals had a significantly lower risk of prolonged periods of sick leave. The risk of sick leave durations of >7 days was most markedly reduced in patients taking cineole (OR 0.74 [0.63-0.86]) and Pelargonium root extract (OR 0.79 [0.54-0.96]).ConclusionThe use of selected phytopharmaceuticals for acute respiratory infections is associated with a significantly reduced need for antibiotic prescriptions in the further course of the disease, as well as significantly shorter sick leaves.

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