MEDICATIONS: ANTIBIOTICS NOT ASSOCIATED
WITH SIGNIFICANT BENEFIT IN PREVENTING FLUID BUILDUP IN CHILDREN WITH EAR
INFECTIONS
February 28, 2008 — When prescribed to children with middle ear infections,
antibiotics are not associated with a significant reduction in fluid buildup in
the ear, according to a meta-analysis of previously published studies in the
February issue of Archives of Otolaryngology — Head & Neck Surgery, a
journal of the American Medical Association.
Ear infections are among the most common diseases in infants and children,
according to background information in the article. Middle ear infections (acute
otitis media) may lead to fluid buildup in the middle ear, a condition known as
otitis media with effusion. "The effusion may lead to a conductive hearing loss
of 15 decibels to 40 decibels, and this hearing loss could have an adverse
effect on language development, cognitive development, behavior and quality of
life," the authors write.
Laura Koopman, M.Sc., of University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands,
and colleagues analyzed data from 1,328 children age 6 months to 12 years with
acute middle ear infections who participated in five randomized controlled
trials comparing antibiotics to placebo or to no treatment. A total of 660
children were assigned to not receive antibiotics.
Overall, 44 percent of the children were younger than age 2 and 51.8 percent
had recurrent ear infections. The risk of developing middle ear effusion was
highest for children in these groups. Children taking antibiotics were 90
percent as likely to develop effusion as those who did not take antibiotics, but
this difference was not statistically significant.
"Because of a marginal effect of antibiotic therapy on the development of
asymptomatic middle ear effusion and the known negative effects of prescribing
antibiotics, including the development of antibiotic resistance and adverse
effects, we do not recommend prescribing antibiotics to prevent middle ear
effusion," the authors write. The results align with current treatment
guidelines, which do not recommend prescribing antibiotics to prevent effusion.
"However, more research is needed to identify relevant subgroups of children
who have middle ear effusion that might benefit from other treatments," they
conclude.
|