Sinusitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of National Guidelines for Acute Sinusitis
Viral upper respiratory infections occur frequently during childhood (6-8 per year) and are,
for the most part, self-limited episodes that resolve spontaneously and do not require
antibiotic therapy. Acute otitis media and acute bacterial sinusitis are frequent
complications of viral upper respiratory infections that will benefit from treatment with
antibiotics. Acute bacterial sinusitis is one of the most common diagnoses in ambulatory
practice and, in all age groups, accounts for an estimated 25 million physician office
visits annually. It is essential to distinguish between patients who are experiencing
uncomplicated viral upper respiratory infections and acute bacterial sinusitis to avoid the
excessive use of antibiotics for patients who will not benefit from them. This is especially
important now because of the escalation of antibiotic resistance among the bacteria that
commonly cause acute bacterial sinusitis, acute otitis media and pneumonia. Inappropriate
use of antibiotics is a major contributor to the problem of antimicrobial resistance - a
problem which dramatically increases both the cost and complexity of treatment.
To improve the diagnosis and treatment of patients with acute bacterial sinusitis and reduce
the inappropriate use of antibiotics, clinical guidelines have been developed by three
national organizations: the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Sinus and Allergy Health
Partnership and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Traditionally, the diagnosis
of acute bacterial sinusitis is suspected on the basis of clinical signs and symptoms and is
confirmed with the performance of images (either plain radiographs, computed tomography or
magnetic resonance imaging). All three guidelines recommend that the diagnosis and treatment
of acute bacterial sinusitis should be based on clinical criteria alone without the
confirmation of imaging or other laboratory data. Although the similarity between the
different guidelines suggests that there is widespread consensus to use clinical criteria to
diagnose acute bacterial sinusitis, there is virtually no evidence to support this position.
Specific Aim 1 of this project is to evaluate the use of clinical criteria, without the
performance of images, as the basis for the diagnosis of acute bacterial sinusitis. A
randomized, placebo-controlled study design will be used to determine if the clinical
criteria proposed by the different guidelines can be used to identify children with upper
respiratory symptoms who will respond to antibiotic therapy. It is expected that children
with acute bacterial sinusitis who receive an antimicrobial will recover more quickly and
more often than children who receive placebo.
Context: Bacterial infections of the paranasal sinuses are an important cause of morbidity
in children. However, these infections may be difficult to distinguish from viral upper
respiratory infections. Consequently, children with viral upper respiratory infections are
frequently treated with antibiotics. The inappropriate use of antibiotics for viral upper
respiratory infections is costly and has been responsible, at least in part, for the
emergence of antibiotic resistance. To improve the diagnosis and treatment of patients with
acute bacterial sinusitis and reduce the inappropriate use of antibiotics, clinical
guidelines have been developed. Three national organizations have recently published
different guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute bacterial sinusitis: the
American Academy of Pediatrics, the Sinus and Allergy Health Partnership and the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. All three guidelines recommend that the diagnosis and
treatment of acute bacterial sinusitis should be based on clinical criteria without the
confirmation of imaging or other laboratory data. Although the similarity between the
different guidelines suggests that there is widespread consensus to use clinical criteria to
diagnose acute bacterial sinusitis, there is virtually no evidence to support this position.
Objectives: The objectives of this study are:
1. to determine the effectiveness of antibiotic treatment of children diagnosed to have
acute sinusitis on clinical grounds alone without the performance of sinus images and
2. to evaluate the response to antibiotic therapy or placebo in terms of financial cost to
the insurers, patient and family.
Setting and Participants: The study, employing a prospective, randomized, and double blind
design will be conducted in three primary care facilities serving a diverse racial and
socioeconomic population. Children will be eligible for the study if they are between the
ages of 1 and 10 years and present with one of three clinical presentations. Group 1 will be
comprised of subjects with persistent disease defined as nasal discharge (of any quality) or
daytime cough (which may be worse at night) or both persisting for more than 10 days without
evidence of improvement; Group 2 will be patients with non-persistent disease consisting of
two subsets: children with nasal discharge or daytime cough that is worsening either on or
after the 6th day (> 120 hours) of symptoms [worsening is manifest by the new onset of
documented fever (temperature > 100.5o F ) or substantial increase in nasal discharge or
cough] and children with severe disease defined as a documented temperature of at least 102o
F and purulent (thick, colored and opaque) nasal discharge present concurrently for at least
3 consecutive days (68-72 hours).
Main Outcome Measure: Will be a comparison of the proportion of children who have a complete
resolution (cure) of their respiratory symptoms in each of the treatment groups (amoxicillin
potassium clavulanate and placebo). Secondary outcome measures will include the proportion
of children in each treatment group who:
1. are cured after 72 hours of antibiotic therapy,
2. who fail therapy,
3. who relapse between 10 and 30 days after entry into the treatment groups, and
4. who develop adverse events during the treatment interval of the study. Other outcome
measures are the total expenses incurred by the health care system, patients and
families during the course of the study and parental impression of whether their child
was receiving active drug or placebo.
Statistical Analyses: Analysis will be done, using the Chi square statistic to determine the
significance of the difference in proportion of the patients in each treatment group
(antibiotic versus placebo) who sustain a complete resolution of their respiratory symptoms.
A separate analysis will be done for children with persistent and non-persistent
presentations. Analysis will also be done for each of the secondary outcome measures. For
children enrolled in the trial, direct medical costs will be calculated and compared between
treatment groups, including costs for antibiotic, hospitalizations, emergency room services,
non-study related office visits, and antibiotics (other than the study medication), other
medications prescribed and over-the counter medications used. Indirect medical costs will be
assessed by comparing:
1. number of sick days,
2. number of days in which the parent/s could not work due to the children being sick,
3. number of days in which alternative day care arrangement were necessary for a sick
child.
Confounders Included in the Study: The study design, which is prospective, randomized and
double blind, will on average, be the most effective way to control for potential
confounders. Because the investigators anticipate that age and clinical severity may impact
substantially on response to therapy, the groups have been stratified by these two
variables.
Biases to be Addressed: The prospective, randomized and double blind study design should
minimize the introduction of bias. To insure the generalizability of the results, the study
is conducted among three different clinical populations: rural, urban indigent and urban
middle class. Strict eligibility criteria and outcome measures will be employed at all three
clinical sites in which the study will be performed.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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