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Sarah D de Ferranti a Division of Clinical Care
Research, Department of Medicine, New England Medical Center, 750 Washington Street, Boston, MA 02111, USA, b Division of Geographic Medicine
and Infectious Diseases, Tupper Research Institute, Department of
Medicine, New England Medical Center, Boston
Correspondence to: Dr Lau
joseph.lau{at}es.nemc.org
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Abstract |
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Objectives: To examine whether antibiotics are
indicated in treating uncomplicated acute sinusitis and, if so, whether newer and more expensive antibiotics with broad spectra of
antimicrobial activity are more effective than amoxycillin or folate
inhibitors.
Design: Meta-analysis of randomised trials.
Setting: Outpatient clinics.
Subjects: 2717 patients with acute sinusitis or acute
exacerbation of chronic sinusitis from 27 trials.
Interventions: Any antibiotic versus placebo;
amoxycillin or folate inhibitors versus newer, more expensive
antibiotics.
Main outcome measurements: Clinical failures and
cures.
Results: Compared with placebo, antibiotics decreased
the incidence of clinical failures by half (risk ratio 0.54 (95% confidence interval 0.37 to 0.79)). Risk of clinical failure among 1553 randomised patients was not meaningfully decreased with more expensive
antibiotics as compared with amoxycillin (risk ratio 0.86 (0.62 to
1.19); risk difference 0.9 fewer failures per 100 patients (1.4 more
failures to 3.1 fewer failures per 100 patients)). The results were
similar for other antibiotics versus folate inhibitors (risk ratio 1.01 (0.52 to 1.97)), but data were sparse (n=410) and of low quality.
Conclusions: Amoxycillin and folate inhibitors are
essentially as effective as more expensive antibiotics for the initial treatment of uncomplicated acute sinusitis. Small differences in
efficacy may exist, but are unlikely to be clinically
important.
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Key messages
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Introduction |
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Acute sinusitis is a common infection. It is usually treated with antibiotics, often in conjunction with decongestants. A wide variety of antibiotics are used, but there is little information to allow doctors to determine the best initial choice of antibiotic, in particular whether any of the newer broad spectrum drugs are significantly more effective than older, less expensive drugs such as amoxycillin or co-trimoxazole (trimethoprim plus sulfamethoxazole). The usual pathogens in this infection are Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae, with a lesser contribution of Moraxella catarrhalis and other species.1 These species are generally but not uniformly susceptible to amoxycillin and co-trimoxazole. If newer, more expensive antibiotics are more effective then their use would be warranted, but, if not, they should be reserved for specific circumstances. Avoiding unnecessary use of newer, broad spectrum antibiotics is important because of costs but also because of concern about the rising rate of antimicrobial resistance.
A recent meta-analysis considered 12 randomised trials comparing antibiotics of different classes and four trials comparing similar class antibiotics and found no substantive differences among them in the treatment of acute sinusitis.2 However, the analysis was limited to randomised studies of adults published from 1984 to 1995. No overall comparison with the older drugs amoxycillin and co-trimoxazole was carried out, and the effects of antibiotics compared with placebo were not formally addressed. Our study focuses on both of these issues.
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Methods |
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Study selection
Using the terms of specific antibiotic classes and
"sinusitis," we searched Medline up to May 1998 for randomised
trials of acute sinusitis. We also manually searched Excerpta
Medica and recent abstracts for the interscience conference on
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (1993-7)3 and
inspected references of all trials, review articles, and special issues
for additional studies. No language restrictions were applied. Trials
were eligible for inclusion if three criteria were fulfilled:
(a) the trial compared amoxycillin or a folate inhibitor
with another antibiotic, generally one with a broad spectrum of
activity, including cephalosporins, penicillins with
lactamase
inhibitors, tetracyclines, quinolones, and macrolides;
(b) patients were randomly assigned to treatment arms;
and (c) the trial evaluated acute sinusitis or an acute exacerbation of chronic sinusitis. We excluded trials that compared doses of non-antimicrobial drugs and trials of subacute or chronic sinusitis (mean duration of symptoms >3 weeks). We also examined placebo controlled studies to assess the effect of antibiotics on the
natural course of acute sinusitis.
Data extraction
Data were extracted independently by two authors. Outcomes
of interest were clinical cure, improvement, and failure as assessed within 48 hours of the end of treatment. Cures and failures were recorded as defined by the individual study: cure generally meant resolution of all signs and symptoms, and failure generally signified no change or worsening of signs and symptoms. We also extracted data on
radiographic cure, improvement, or failure and bacteriological cure or
failure as defined by each study. In our main analyses we used clinical
outcomes as the end points most relevant to doctors because primary
care practitioners do not routinely obtain sinus films for
uncomplicated acute sinusitis and almost never perform sinus aspirates,
and because there is no evidence of a correlation between radiographic
or bacteriological failure and clinical outcomes. We separately
assessed bacteriological and radiographic failures and patient
withdrawals due to adverse drug effects.
Quality assessment
We assessed studies for the following characteristics:
blinded versus unblinded design, criteria for diagnosis of sinusitis, clinical outcomes, loss of subjects to follow up, and use of
decongestants. The diagnosis of sinusitis was considered "firm" if
culture of sinus aspirations or radiographic evaluations (presence of
air-fluid levels, mucosal thickening >6 mm, or sinus opacification)
were confirmatory. Any other diagnostic criteria, including nasal
swabs, were considered "subjective." We considered outcome criteria
to be well specified when symptoms or signs were assessed by patients or physicians in a way that could be replicated; criteria were specified to some extent when the signs or symptoms used to evaluate outcome were noted but not how these were evaluated; and criteria were
unclear when no mention was made of how clinical outcomes were
determined.
Data synthesis and statistical analysis
We pooled the results from (a) placebo
controlled studies to determine the effect of treatment with any
antibiotic on the outcome of acute sinusitis, (b)
studies in which amoxycillin was compared with various antibiotics
except folate inhibitors to compare the outcomes of treatment, and
(c) studies in which folate inhibitors were compared
with other antibiotics except amoxycillin. We pooled risk ratios, risk
differences, and event rates in the control group using both the
Mantel-Haenszel fixed effects model5 and the DerSimonian
and Laird random effects model,6 which takes into account
the variability of the true treatment effect between studies. We
assessed the heterogeneity between studies with
2 tests
and deemed P<0.1 to indicate significance.7
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Results |
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Trial characteristics and quality assessment
We identified 80 randomised clinical trials of antibiotic
treatment of acute sinusitis. Most were ineligible for our
meta-analysis: 48 did not use the reference drugs pertinent to this
analysis, three inextricably combined patients with sinusitis with
those with other infections,9-11 and two inextricably
combined patients with acute, chronic, and recurrent
sinusitis.
12 13
Of the 27 trials that qualified for our
meta-analysis, six were placebo controlled (one study comparing
amoxycillin also had a placebo arm),14-19 13 compared
amoxycillin with other antibiotics,
16 20-31
and eight
compared a folate inhibitor (co-trimoxazole, trimethoprim plus
sulfametopyrazine, or brodimoprim) with other
antibiotics.32-39 (For details of these trials, see extra
table on the BMJ website.) An additional large (n=438)
and well done trial using penicillin V as the reference drug was
excluded from our main analysis because penicillin V is less active in
vitro than amoxycillin against H influenzae and M
catarrhalis but was included in the sensitivity analysis.40 Among the included trials, sample size ranged
from 14 to 323 patients (2717 patients overall). The mean ages of
patients ranged from 25 to 44 years, except for two trials that
evaluated paediatric patients
exclusively.
16 20
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Antibiotics v placebo
In the six studies comparing any antibiotic with placebo,
antibiotics were significantly more effective, reducing treatment failures by almost half (table 1, fig 1). However, symptoms
improved or disappeared in 69% of patients without any antibiotic
treatment (95% confidence interval 57% to 79%). Although the
observed heterogeneity between trials did not reach significance, there
was a suggestion that one trial that included patients simply on the
basis of sinusitis-like symptoms without further diagnostic
documentation had the highest rates of cure or improvement in the
placebo group (85% at 10 days) and showed no benefit from
antibiotics,19 whereas trials with more tightly defined
patient populations and lower spontaneous improvement rates showed a
clear benefit from antibiotics.
Amoxycillin and folate inhibitors v other
antibiotics
Clinical outcomes
There was no statistically significant or clinically
meaningful difference in rate of failure or cure between amoxycillin and other antibiotics (table 2, fig 2). Compared with other
antibiotics, treatment of 100 patients with amoxycillin would lead to
only 0.85 more failures. The results were similar for folate
inhibitors, but the data were more limited (table 2, fig 3). Compared
with other drugs, the risk differences of clinical cure with
amoxycillin were 3.2% (95% confidence interval
1.5% to 7.8%) and
with folate inhibitors they were 1.2% (
10% to 12.4%). The results
were similar when we added a trial comparing penicillin with
azithromycin to the comparisons with
amoxycillin.
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There was no heterogeneity of treatment effects in the comparisons with amoxycillin. By contrast, there was some evidence of heterogeneity in the studies comparing folate inhibitors with other antibiotics (P=0.09 for clinical cure, P=0.18 for clinical failures), possibly because co-trimoxazole seemed less effective than pivampicillin plus pivmecillinam in one study.34
Sensitivity analyses showed similar results (table 3). In all of these analyses there was a tendency for an estimated 11-20% risk reduction in clinical failures with other antibiotics compared with amoxycillin that did not reach formal statistical significance. This tendency corresponded to a clinically negligible benefit (less than 1 failure averted per 100 patients). Because of sparse data, sensitivity analysis was less useful for folate inhibitors.
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Radiographic and bacteriological outcomes and patient withdrawals
Radiographic and bacteriological data were not available
for many trials (table 2). Rates of radiographic failures within 48 hours of the end of treatment were not significantly different among
patients treated with other antibiotics compared with patients treated
with amoxycillin or penicillin or folate inhibitors. Likewise, rates of
bacteriological failure were not significantly different, although most
samples were obtained with nasal swabs and the data are therefore not
reliable. There was no significant difference between different
treatments in the rate of patients withdrawal.
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Discussion |
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This meta-analysis showed that in two thirds of the cases of sinusitis, there is spontaneous improvement or cure without antibiotic treatment. Among patients with sinusitis defined by clinical criteria alone, the rate of spontaneous resolution may be even higher. Treatment with any antibiotic reduced the rate of clinical failures by half. Treatment with newer, generally more expensive, antibiotics did not seem to reduce the rate of treatment failure beyond what amoxycillin and co-trimoxazole could achieve.
Limitations of study
We compared the reference drugs amoxycillin and folate
inhibitors with a heterogeneous array of antibiotics with differing antibacterial spectra. It is possible that, by grouping these drugs, we
have obscured some important and systematic differences between the
drug classes. There were too few studies in any single antibiotic
group to allow a meaningful meta-analysis of each class. However,
simple inspection of figures 2 and 3 suggests that there was no
consistent superiority of any drug class over the reference drugs.
Implications of study
We found only two studies, with a total of 113 patients,
that directly compared amoxycillin and folate
inhibitors.
42 43
The small number of patients did not
allow a meaningful comparison of the drugs: the risk ratio of failure
with folate inhibitors versus amoxycillin was 0.5, but the 95%
confidence interval was wide (0.08 to 3.01). Co-trimoxazole has a
broader spectrum than amoxycillin, being active against amoxycillin
resistant H influenzae and M catarrhalis.
Its use should largely satisfy those concerned about antimicrobial
resistance when prescribing treatment for community acquired acute
sinusitis.
Conclusions
Most clinical trials of new antibiotics compare the
drugs with other newer drugs rather than with the inexpensive older
drugs that we examined. There are obvious commercial reasons for this strategy: if the efficacy of a new drug were shown to be merely equivalent to that of an older drug the findings would hardly provide a
useful marketing tool. There is societal value in decreasing the
unnecessary use of newer, broad spectrum antibiotics to reduce the cost
of care and possibly to reduce the rate of development of resistant
microorganisms in the community.48-50 Even more
fundamental is the need for accurate, inexpensive, and non-invasive
methods to diagnose acute bacterial sinusitis.
51 52
Such
methods might sharply reduce the number of patients needing any
antibiotic treatment given that most of the patients with acute
sinusitis experienced spontaneous cure or improvement of
symptoms.
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: MB and JL had the original idea for the meta-analysis. All the authors took part in the design and implementation of the study protocol and data analysis. SDdeF wrote the initial draft of the manuscript, and all the authors participated in its revision. JL is guarantor for the study.
Funding: This work was supported by grant R01 HS07782 from the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research of the US Public Health Service and grant T32 AI07389 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health.
Conflict of interest: None.
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References |
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a comparison.
Infection
1988;
16(suppl 1):
S51-S54.
comparing cefpodoxime proxetil with amoxicillin.
Scand J Infec Dis
1995;
27:
229-234[Medline].(Accepted 5 August 1998)
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