Antibiotic prescription for outpatients with influenza and subsequent hospitalisation: A cohort study using insurance data

Author:

Yokomichi Hiroshi1ORCID,Mochizuki Mie2,Lee Joseph Jonathan3,Kojima Reiji4,Horiuchi Sayaka1,Ooka Tadao45,Yamagata Zentaro46

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Medicine University of Yamanashi Chuo Japan

2. Department of Paediatrics University of Yamanashi Chuo Japan

3. Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

4. Department of Health Sciences University of Yamanashi Chuo Japan

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

6. Centre for Birth Cohort Studies University of Yamanashi Chuo Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWhether prophylactic administration of antibiotics to patients with influenza reduces the hospitalisation risk is unknown. We aimed to examine the association between antibiotic prescription in outpatients with influenza infection and subsequent hospitalisation.MethodsWe conducted a cohort study using health insurance records of Japanese clinic and hospital visits between 2012 and 2016. Participants were outpatients (age, 0–74 years) with confirmed influenza infection who were prescribed anti‐influenza medicine. The primary outcomes were the hospitalisation risk from all causes and pneumonia and the duration of hospitalisation due to pneumonia.ResultsWe analysed 903,104 outpatient records with 2469 hospitalisations. The risk of hospitalisation was greater in outpatients prescribed anti‐influenza medicine plus antibiotics (0.31% for all causes and 0.18% for pneumonia) than in those prescribed anti‐influenza medicine only (0.27% and 0.17%, respectively). However, the risk of hospitalisation was significantly lower in patients prescribed peramivir and antibiotics than in those prescribed peramivir only. Patients who received add‐on antibiotics had a significantly longer hospital stay (4.12 days) than those who received anti‐influenza medicine only (3.77 days). In all age groups, the hospitalisation risk from pneumonia tended to be greater in those who received antibiotics than in those prescribed anti‐influenza medicine only. However, among older patients (65–74 years), those provided add‐on antibiotics had an average 5.24‐day shorter hospitalisation due to pneumonia than those provided anti‐influenza medicine only (not significant).ConclusionsIn outpatient cases of influenza, patients who are prescribed antibiotics added to antiviral medicines have a higher risk of hospitalisation and longer duration of hospitalisation due to pneumonia.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Epidemiology

Reference20 articles.

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Disease burden of flu.2022. Accessed October 12 2023.https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/index.html

2. Rates of Influenza-Associated Hospitalization, Intensive Care Unit Admission, and In-Hospital Death by Race and Ethnicity in the United States From 2009 to 2019

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