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  • Title: Clinical outcome in children with culture-negative acute otitis media.
    Author: Leibovitz E, Nakash E, Givon-Lavi N, Greenberg D, Satran R, Raiz S, Piglansky L, Leiberman A, Dagan R.
    Journal: Pediatr Infect Dis J; 2009 Dec; 28(12):1105-10. PubMed ID: 19935271.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Culture-negative AOM is often milder and associated with lower local/systemic inflammatory responses than culture-positive AOM. STUDY OBJECTIVES: To compare the clinical outcome of culture-negative AOM with that of culture-positive AOM children. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Children aged 3 to 35 months with AOM were enrolled in 11 double-tympanocentesis antibiotic efficacy studies documenting both bacteriologic (days 4-6 of treatment) and clinical outcome (days 11-14, end of treatment). Univariate analysis (age, gender, ethnicity, previous AOM history, and antibiotic treatment) between culture-negative and culture-positive AOM patients was performed by Student t test, ANOVA, or chi2 test. Those found to be significant were further submitted to multivariable regression analysis. RESULTS: A total of 1088 patients (mean age, 11.95 +/- 5.96 months, 209 culture-negative and 879 culture-positive AOM) were enrolled. No differences were recorded between culture-negative AOM and culture-positive AOM patients in age, gender, ethnicity and number of previous episodes. Seventy-four percent (650/879) culture-positive AOM patients achieved bacteriologic eradication within 3 to 5 days. Successful outcome (cured + improved) was recorded in 90% (189/209) culture-negative AOM patients versus 86% (758/879) in culture-positive AOM (P = 0.086). Successful clinical outcome was more frequent in culture-negative than in culture-positive AOM without bacteriologic eradication (90% vs. 67% [154/229], P < 0.001). No difference in successful clinical outcome was found between culture-negative versus culture-positive AOM patients with bacterial eradication (90% vs. 93% [604/650], P = 0.24). Overall, the inclusion of culture-negative AOM patients in the evaluation of clinical failures rates in study patients decreased the total clinical failure rate by 9%. We present a hypothetical antibiotic efficacy study enrolling 300 patients in whom 2 drugs with different bacteriologic efficacy rates (A-90% and B-60%) were used. When the culture-negative cases (5% clinical failure) enrolled increased from 50/300 (16.7%) to 150/300 (50%), the overall clinical failure rate decreased by 36% (from 17.4% to 11.2%, P = 0.08) for the less efficacious drug, while remaining unmodified for the more efficacious drug (9.6% and 8.8%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: (1) Clinical outcome in culture-negative AOM was similar to that of culture-positive AOM with bacteriologic eradication and both were superior to that of culture-positive AOM without eradication; (2) Inclusion of culture-negative AOM patients in series aiming at antibiotic efficacy may falsely improve the clinical outcome for antibiotics with reduced ability to eradicate AOM pathogens.
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