A study conducted at two large pediatric academic healthcare systems found that three-quarters of antibiotic prescriptions for children with ear infections were longer than recommended, researchers reported last week in the Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society.
Using electronic medical record (EMR) data, researchers analyzed outpatient encounters for acute otitis media (AOM) in children ages 2 to 17 years at 135 care locations affiliated with Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) and Washington University from 2019 through 2022. The primary outcome was the proportion of 5-day antibiotic prescriptions. The researchers also looked at the proportion of 7-day and 10-day prescriptions, as well as treatment failure, AOM recurrence, hospitalization, and adverse drug events.
AOM accounts for roughly 25% of all antibiotics prescribed to children annually. The American Academy of Pediatrics AOM guidelines, published in 2013, recommend durations of 5 to 7 days for children ages 2 years and older with uncomplicated AOM. But previous studies have found most children receive longer durations.
75% of prescriptions were for 10 days
Of the 73,198 AOM encounters included in the study, 61,612 (84%) resulted in an antibiotic prescription, and only 3,144 (5%) of those prescriptions were for 5 days; 12,060 (20%) were for 7 days and 45,689 (75%) were for 10 days. Ten-day durations were more common at Washington University than VUMC (78% vs 70%) while 7-day prescriptions were more common at VUMC (25% vs 17%). Non-first line antibiotics were prescribed in 30% of cases.
Across both health systems, treatment failure, AOM recurrence, hospitalization, and mastoiditis were rare, as were office, emergency department, or urgent care visits for AOM within 30 days of the index visit.
The study authors say interventions to promote more widespread use of shorter durations for AOM in pediatric outpatient settings are urgently needed.
"Antibiotic prescribing for AOM is an important opportunity to improve antibiotic stewardship in children," they wrote. "Shortening durations of therapy for AOM has the potential to markedly reduce antibiotic exposure among children; this may lead to important reductions in the development of antibiotic resistance, adverse events, and other unintended consequences of antibiotics."