SGEM#359: Meet Me Halfway on the Duration of Antibiotics for Non-Severe Pediatric Community-Acquired Pneumonia
The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine - A podcast by Dr. Ken Milne
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Date: February 7th, 2022 Reference: Williams et al. Short- vs standard-course outpatient antibiotic therapy for community-acquired pneumonia in children: the scout-cap randomized clinical trial. JAMA Pediatrics 2022 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Dennis Ren is a pediatric emergency medicine fellow at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, DC. Case: A three-year-old boy presents to the emergency department (ED) with fever and cough. On exam, he is breathing a little fast and his oxygen saturation is 94% on room air but otherwise appears comfortable. You appreciate some decreased breath sounds and crackles on your lung exam. You make a clinical diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and plan to send him home with a 10-day course of amoxicillin. His mother asks you, “Last time he took antibiotics for that long, he had terrible diarrhea. Do you think we can do fewer days of antibiotics and still treat the pneumonia?” Background: We have covered the topic of pediatric community-acquired pneumonia before on the SGEM #338 (Are Children with CAP Safe and Sound if Treated for 5 days rather than 10 days of antibiotics?) with Dr. Andrew Tagg on the Canadian SAFER Trial [1]. This trial suggested that a 5-day course of antibiotics was not non-inferior to the traditional 10-day course of antibiotics for children with CAP treated as outpatients. Things were much simpler when I started my pediatric training. I learned that a well-appearing child presenting to clinic with fever, slight tachypnea, and focal lung exam findings could be diagnosed with pneumonia by history and physical exam alone and go home with 10 days of amoxicillin BID. But now for some reason, this topic feels more complicated…maybe because there are so many different ways people go about diagnosing pneumonia and such variability in the reliability of physical exam findings [2,3]. Since we covered the SAFER trial, we have also had the CAP-IT [4] trial from the United Kingdom and Ireland which evaluated both high and low-dose amoxicillin for the treatment of CAP over three or seven days. They found that both a lower dose and a shorter duration of antibiotic therapy was non-inferior to higher dose, longer duration antibiotic therapy. They did find that cough persisted longer with the group that received a shorter duration of antibiotic therapy but overall adherence to medication was better in the group receiving a shorter duration of antibiotics. Why so many pneumonia studies? Ultimately, we want to find that balance of treating an infection but avoiding antibiotic-associated adverse effects and antibiotic resistance. So where is that sweet spot? Clinical Question: Is a 5-day course of antibiotics superior to a 10-day course for the treatment of non-severe community-acquired pneumonia in children with respect to clinical outcomes, adverse effects, and antimicrobial resistance? Reference: Williams et al. Short- vs standard-course outpatient antibiotic therapy for community-acquired pneumonia in children: the scout-cap randomized clinical trial. JAMA Pediatrics 2022 * Population: Children 6 to 71 months of age from 8 US cities diagnosed with uncomplicated CAP demonstrating early clinical improvement (no fever, tachypnea, severe cough) on day 3 to 6 of their initially prescribed oral beta-lactam therapy. * Excluded: Severe pneumonia (Hospitalization, radiographic evidence of parapneumonic effusion, empyema, lung abscess, pneumatocele or Microbiologically confirmed Staph aureus or Strep pyogenes pneumonia.