Prevalence and predictors of initial oral antibiotic treatment failure in adult emergency department patients with cellulitis: a pilot study

TitlePrevalence and predictors of initial oral antibiotic treatment failure in adult emergency department patients with cellulitis: a pilot study
Publication TypePublished Journal Article
2015
AuthorsQuirke M, Boland F, Fahey T, O'Sullivan R, Hill A
JournalBMJ Open
Volume5
Issue6
Abstract

Introduction Assessment of cellulitis severity in the emergency department (ED) setting is problematic. Given the lack of research performed to describe the epidemiology and management of cellulitis, it is unsurprising that heterogeneous antibiotic prescribing and poor adherence to guidelines is common. It has been shown that up to 20.5% of ED patients with cellulitis require either a change in route or dose of the initially prescribed antibiotic regimen. The current treatment failure rate for empirically prescribed oral antibiotic therapy in Irish EDs is unknown. The association of patient risk factors with treatment failure has not been described in our setting. Lower prevalence of community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus-associated infection, differing antibiotic prescribing preferences and varying availability of outpatient intravenous therapy programmes may result in different rates of empiric antibiotic treatment failure from those previously described.

URLhttp://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/5/6/e008150.full?sid=0db5be06-30df-4230-8fa4-2449ec3e3ce6
DOI10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008150