Are antibiotics effective for acute purulent rhinitis Systematic review and meta-analysis of placebo controlled randomised trials
1 Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract
Objective To systematically review the evidence for the effectiveness of antibiotics in acute purulent rhinitis (many guidelines advise against their use on the basis of one study that showed no effect).
Data sources Medline, Embase, Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials, and reference lists of retrieved articles.
, 百拇医药
Review methods Meta-analysis of data from double blind randomised placebo controlled trials comparing antibiotics with placebo for acute purulent rhinitis (duration less than 10 days).
Results Seven studies were retrieved; four contributed data on benefits of antibiotics, and four contributed data on harms of antibiotics. The pooled relative risk of benefit for persistent purulent rhinitis at five to eight days with antibiotics was 1.18 (95% confidence interval 1.05 to 1.33). The numbers needed to treat ranged from 7 to 15 when the pooled relative risk was applied to the range of control event rates. The relative risk for adverse effects with antibiotics was 1.46 (1.10 to 1.94). The numbers needed to harm for adverse effects ranged from 12 to 78. No serious harms were reported in the placebo arms.
, 百拇医药
Conclusions Antibiotics are probably effective for acute purulent rhinitis. They can cause harm, usually in the form of gastrointestinal effects. Most patients will get better without antibiotics, supporting the current "no antibiotic as first line" advice.
Introduction
Acute purulent rhinitis (a runny nose with coloured discharge) is a common feature of the common cold. One study of the natural history of acute rhinitis stated that clear and purulent rhinitis both lasted about two weeks,1 although the duration might vary with the prevalence of specific infecting organisms. Nevertheless, the presence of purulent nasal discharge has repeatedly been shown to be an important determinant of the prescribing of antibiotics for respiratory tract infections for both adults and children.2-4 Indeed, one study found that purulent nasal discharge was a stronger predictor of antibiotic prescribing than any other characteristic of patients.4
, http://www.100md.com
Most guidelines recommend that antibiotics should not be used for this condition,5 6 citing one study that found no evidence that antibiotics reduce the duration of acute purulent rhinitis.7 However, a recent larger study reported that treatment with amoxicillin reduced the duration of purulent rhinitis, although it found no significant difference between the groups in terms of general improvement in symptoms.8
Concern exists about overuse of antibiotics leading to bacterial resistance.9 Most antibiotics are used in primary care, so this is where any reduction needs to take place. As antibiotic use is often based on the presence of purulent rhinitis, determining whether antibiotics are effective in this condition is important. Our aim was to systematically search for studies on the effectiveness and harms of antibiotics for acute purulent rhinitis and to do a meta-analysis and review of the articles.
, 百拇医药
Methods
Inclusion and exclusion criteria—We included controlled trials in which the intervention was an antibiotic compared with a placebo for patients with acute purulent rhinitis. The primary outcomes were persistence versus clearance of purulent rhinitis and any adverse events reported. We defined "acute" as most patients having less than 10 days with this symptom. We chose 10 days to separate our review from the Cochrane review of chronic purulent rhinitis, which used 10 days as the starting point for the inclusion criteria.10 The patients could be seen in any setting equivalent to general practice (that is, they could self refer). We did not limit the age of participants but excluded patients who were considered, in the original studies, to have sinusitis.
, 百拇医药
Searches—We searched (to 13 November 2005) Medline, Embase, and the Cochrane controlled trials register, using the terms "purulent and (rhinitis or nasopharyngitis or rhinorrhea or rhinorrhoea)." An alternative search on the rhinitis terms and randomised controlled trial found no further relevant papers. We also considered all the papers in the Cochrane review on antibiotics for the common cold and acute purulent rhinitis and the review on antibiotics for acute maxillary sinusitis.11 12 We contacted the authors of published controlled trials of antibiotics for the common cold to see if they were aware of any unpublished studies. We imposed no language restriction.
, http://www.100md.com
Selection, validity assessment, and data abstraction—Each author independently assessed the titles and abstracts of potential papers; assessed the included trials for the quality of randomisation, concealment of allocation, co-interventions, losses to follow-up, intention to treat analysis, degree of blinding, and extraction of data; and scored the trials by using the Jadad scale.13 Disagreement between the authors was readily resolved by discussion.
Quantitative analysis—We used RevMan 4.2 (Nordic Cochrane Centre, Rigshospitalet, 2003) to assess the pooled relative risks and 95% confidence intervals.14 We present results of both random effects and fixed effects models for the main analysis; for simplicity, we present results of only the fixed effects model for other analyses.
, http://www.100md.com
Results
Search results and study characteristics
Studies included in quantitative analysis
Taylor (and Vogt) included only children, De Sutter included children and adults, and the other studies included only adults. Three studies reported purulent rhinitis without further explanation.7 15 16 De Sutter relied on the clinical decision of the recruiting doctors, although we noted that 53-56% of participants reported unilateral facial pain8; the other studies did not report the incidence of unilateral facial pain.
, http://www.100md.com
Quantitative analyses
The pooled effect for the studies contributing data specifically on purulent rhinitis shows a significant benefit from antibiotics at five to eight days (fig 2)—relative risk 1.18 (95% confidence interval 1.05 to 1.33, random effects); 1.21 (1.08 to 1.35, fixed effects). If data from Herne are included as purulent rhinitis, the relative risk is 1.21 (1.09 to 1.34, fixed effects). Using a relative risk of 1.18, the numbers needed to treat for a benefit from antibiotics ranged from seven for a baseline rate of 0.8516 20 to 15 for a baseline rate of 0.38.7
, http://www.100md.com
Various antibiotics were used: demethylchlortetracycline in Howie (1970), amoxicillin and co-trimoxazole in Taylor (1977), cefalexin in Todd (1984), and amoxicillin in De Sutter (2002). Pooling the two studies that used amoxicillin gives a relative risk of 1.26 (1.11 to 1.45, fixed effects).
The pooled relative risk for adverse effects was 1.46 (1.10 to 1.94, fixed effects), obtained from four studies.7 8 15 16 The numbers needed to harm ranged from 12 to 78 for control event rates in the statistically significant studies (0.1898 to 0.02815). The harms were mainly gastrointestinal and a small number of rashes.
, 百拇医药
A funnel plot suggests a paucity of small studies with small or no effects. All of the included studies scored five out of five on the Jadad scale.
Discussion
The findings from this study indicate that antibiotics for acute purulent rhinitis may be beneficial. Harms attributed to antibiotics were mainly vomiting, diarrhoea, and abdominal pain but also included rashes and hyperactivity (table). No more serious harm occurred in the placebo arm in any of the trials, which fits with the clinical notion that this is not a serious condition. At best, a number needed to treat of seven means that six patients get no benefit for every one who gets benefit. Furthermore, the number needed to treat for benefit from antibiotics (7-15) overlaps with the number needed to harm (12-78). Our results are consistent with the Cochrane review of chronic purulent rhinitis, which found a benefit for antibiotics (calculated as a reduced risk of persistent purulent rhinitis), with a pooled relative risk of 0.75 (95% confidence interval 0.61 to 0.92) and a number needed to treat of nine (at the mean control event of 0.46).10
, http://www.100md.com
Several of the studies were not of high quality yet scored well on the Jadad scale. None of the studies used an intention to treat analysis, which is not a requirement of the Jadad scale. As various terms are used for acute purulent rhinitis, we cannot be sure that we retrieved all the relevant articles. We found four of the studies in our Cochrane review of antibiotics for the common cold. Although the trend of results is towards an effect of antibiotics, the funnel plot indicates that some publication bias may exist. The studies also used different antibiotics, and the only clearly non-significant study used cefalexin.7 The relative risk from pooling the two amoxicillin studies was statistically significant, so amoxicillin may be preferred if any antibiotic is to be used.
, 百拇医药
The difference between sinusitis and acute purulent rhinitis is not always clear, and involvement of the sinus mucosa in the common cold may be the norm.21 We noted that between 53% and 56% of the participants in De Sutter (2002) had unilateral facial pain.8 In one study of purulent rhinitis of greater than 10 days' duration (and therefore excluded from this analysis), all participants had to be free of abnormalities on their facial x rays.22 In this study, azithromycin was significantly more effective than placebo in clearing purulent rhinitis. It seems that antibiotics may help purulent rhinitis, with or without the presence of sinusitis. Any future studies, however, should specifically assess the presence of sinus infection.
, 百拇医药
Our findings differ from the received wisdom in terms of the effectiveness of antibiotics for acute purulent rhinitis. This highlights the dangers of relying on one study (Todd)7 to decide on the effectiveness of a treatment when other studies show a different effect. Our summation would be to suggest initial management by non-antibiotic treatments or "watchful waiting," and that antibiotics should be used only when symptoms have persisted for long enough to concern parents or patients. In this case, antibiotic treatment may be considered, given that the harms were usually gastrointestinal adverse effects and that individual patients may be aware of their own ability to tolerate specific antibiotics. Our findings are consistent with the review on antibiotics for chronic purulent rhinitis, and we do not feel that more randomised controlled trials on this subject are warranted. Thus we support the current guidelines in their advice not to use antibiotics but arrive at this point by taking into account the evidence, the benefits, and the harms of both treating and not treating.
, 百拇医药
What is already known on this topic
General practitioners often prescribe antibiotics for an acute upper respiratory tract infection when the rhinitis is purulent
Most guidelines recommend against using antibiotics for this condition, but this advice is based on one study
What this study adds
Review of seven papers indicates that antibiotics are probably effective for acute purulent rhinitis
, http://www.100md.com
This is not a sufficient reason to use antibiotics, however, as no serious adverse events occurred in the placebo group
Contributors: Both authors reviewed the abstracts resulting from the search, extracted the data, and wrote the paper. BA did the analysis and is the guarantor.
Funding: The initial Cochrane review "Antibiotics for the common cold" (1998) was funded by the Charitable Trust of the Auckland Faculty of the Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners. This specific review was not funded by any external agency. The authors' salaries were from University of Auckland staff funding.
, 百拇医药
Competing interests: BA is a member of the Future Forum, an educational foundation funded by AstraZeneca UK, and a committee member of the Pharmac seminar series (Pharmac is the New Zealand government funding agency for drugs).
References
Steinweg K. Natural history and prognostic significance of purulent rhinitis. J Fam Pract 1983;17: 61-4.
Arroll B, Goodyear-Smith F. General practitioner management of upper respiratory tract infections: when are antibiotics prescribed N Z Med J 2000;113: 493-6.
, 百拇医药
Mainous AG, Hueston H, Eberlein C. Colour of respiratory discharge and antibiotic use. Lancet 1997;350: 1077.
Gonzales R, Barrett PHJ, Steiner JF. The relation between purulent manifestations and antibiotic treatment of upper respiratory tract infections. J Gen Intern Med 1999;14: 151-6.
Snow V, Mottur-Pilson C, Hickner JM. Principles of appropriate antibiotic use for acute sinusitis in adults. Ann Intern Med 2001;134: 495-7.
, 百拇医药
Rosenstein N, Phillips WR, Gerber MA, Marcy M, Schwartz B, Dowell SF. The common cold—principles of judicious use of antimicrobial agents. Pediatrics 1998;101(suppl): 181-4.
Todd JK, Todd N, Damato J, Todd WA. Bacteriology and treatment of purulent nasopharyngitis: a double blind placebo-controlled evaluation. Ped Infect Dis 1984;3: 226-32.
De Sutter AI, De Meyere MJ, Christiaens TC, van Duriel ML, Peersman W, De Maeseneer JM. Does amoxicillin improve outcomes in patients with purulent rhinorrhea J Fam Pract 2002;51: 317-23.
, 百拇医药
Turnbridge J, Christiansen K. Antibiotic use and resistance—proving the obvious. Lancet 2005;365: 548-9.
Morris P, Leach A. Antibiotics for persistent nasal discharge (rhinosinusitis) in children. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2002;(4):CD001094.
Arroll B, Kenealy T. Antibiotics for the common cold and acute purulent rhinitis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev Issue 2005;(3):CD000247.
Williams JW Jr, Aguilar C, Cornell J, Chiquette E, Dolor RJ, Makela M, et al. Antibiotics for acute maxillary sinusitis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2003;(2):CD000243.
, 百拇医药
Jadad AR, Moore RA, Carroll D, Jenkinson C, Reynolds JM, Gavaghan DJ, et al. Assessing the quality of reports on randomised clinical trials: is blinding necessary Control Clin Trials 1996;17: 1-12.
DerSimonian R, Laird N. Meta-analysis in clinical trials. Control Clin Trials 1986;7: 177-88.
Howie JG, Clark GA. Double blind trial of early demethyltetracycline in minor respiratory tract illness in general practice. Lancet 1970;i: 1099-102.
, 百拇医药
Taylor B, Abbott GD, Kerr MM, Fergusson DM. Amoxycillin and co-trimoxazole in presumed viral respiratory infections in childhood: a placebo controlled trial. BMJ 1977;ii: 552-4.
Vogt FC. Medical management of purulent rhinitis: a double-blind comparison of vasoconstrictor agent alone with a combination of vasoconstrictor and antimicrobial drugs. Clin Pediatr 1966;5: 547-9.
Herne N. Double blinded trial comparing xibornol, tetracycline and placebo in seasonal upper respiratory tract infection. Medicines et Maladies Infectieuses 1980;10: 185-90.
, 百拇医药
Stott NC, West RR. Randomised controlled trial of antibiotics in patients with cough and purulent sputum. BMJ 1976;ii: 556-9.
Sackett D, Straus SE, Richardson S, Rosenberg W, Haynes RB. Evidence-based medicine: how to practice and teach EBM. New York: Churchill Livingstone, 2000.
Gwaltney JM, Phillips CD, Miller RD, Riker RD. Computed tomographic study of the common cold. N Engl J Med 1994;330: 25-30.
Haye R, Lingass E, Hoivik HO, Odegard T. Azithromycin versus placebo in acute infectious rhinitis with clinical symptoms but without radiological signs of maxillary sinusitis. Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis 1998;17: 309-12., 百拇医药(B Arroll, T Kenealy)
Abstract
Objective To systematically review the evidence for the effectiveness of antibiotics in acute purulent rhinitis (many guidelines advise against their use on the basis of one study that showed no effect).
Data sources Medline, Embase, Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials, and reference lists of retrieved articles.
, 百拇医药
Review methods Meta-analysis of data from double blind randomised placebo controlled trials comparing antibiotics with placebo for acute purulent rhinitis (duration less than 10 days).
Results Seven studies were retrieved; four contributed data on benefits of antibiotics, and four contributed data on harms of antibiotics. The pooled relative risk of benefit for persistent purulent rhinitis at five to eight days with antibiotics was 1.18 (95% confidence interval 1.05 to 1.33). The numbers needed to treat ranged from 7 to 15 when the pooled relative risk was applied to the range of control event rates. The relative risk for adverse effects with antibiotics was 1.46 (1.10 to 1.94). The numbers needed to harm for adverse effects ranged from 12 to 78. No serious harms were reported in the placebo arms.
, 百拇医药
Conclusions Antibiotics are probably effective for acute purulent rhinitis. They can cause harm, usually in the form of gastrointestinal effects. Most patients will get better without antibiotics, supporting the current "no antibiotic as first line" advice.
Introduction
Acute purulent rhinitis (a runny nose with coloured discharge) is a common feature of the common cold. One study of the natural history of acute rhinitis stated that clear and purulent rhinitis both lasted about two weeks,1 although the duration might vary with the prevalence of specific infecting organisms. Nevertheless, the presence of purulent nasal discharge has repeatedly been shown to be an important determinant of the prescribing of antibiotics for respiratory tract infections for both adults and children.2-4 Indeed, one study found that purulent nasal discharge was a stronger predictor of antibiotic prescribing than any other characteristic of patients.4
, http://www.100md.com
Most guidelines recommend that antibiotics should not be used for this condition,5 6 citing one study that found no evidence that antibiotics reduce the duration of acute purulent rhinitis.7 However, a recent larger study reported that treatment with amoxicillin reduced the duration of purulent rhinitis, although it found no significant difference between the groups in terms of general improvement in symptoms.8
Concern exists about overuse of antibiotics leading to bacterial resistance.9 Most antibiotics are used in primary care, so this is where any reduction needs to take place. As antibiotic use is often based on the presence of purulent rhinitis, determining whether antibiotics are effective in this condition is important. Our aim was to systematically search for studies on the effectiveness and harms of antibiotics for acute purulent rhinitis and to do a meta-analysis and review of the articles.
, 百拇医药
Methods
Inclusion and exclusion criteria—We included controlled trials in which the intervention was an antibiotic compared with a placebo for patients with acute purulent rhinitis. The primary outcomes were persistence versus clearance of purulent rhinitis and any adverse events reported. We defined "acute" as most patients having less than 10 days with this symptom. We chose 10 days to separate our review from the Cochrane review of chronic purulent rhinitis, which used 10 days as the starting point for the inclusion criteria.10 The patients could be seen in any setting equivalent to general practice (that is, they could self refer). We did not limit the age of participants but excluded patients who were considered, in the original studies, to have sinusitis.
, 百拇医药
Searches—We searched (to 13 November 2005) Medline, Embase, and the Cochrane controlled trials register, using the terms "purulent and (rhinitis or nasopharyngitis or rhinorrhea or rhinorrhoea)." An alternative search on the rhinitis terms and randomised controlled trial found no further relevant papers. We also considered all the papers in the Cochrane review on antibiotics for the common cold and acute purulent rhinitis and the review on antibiotics for acute maxillary sinusitis.11 12 We contacted the authors of published controlled trials of antibiotics for the common cold to see if they were aware of any unpublished studies. We imposed no language restriction.
, http://www.100md.com
Selection, validity assessment, and data abstraction—Each author independently assessed the titles and abstracts of potential papers; assessed the included trials for the quality of randomisation, concealment of allocation, co-interventions, losses to follow-up, intention to treat analysis, degree of blinding, and extraction of data; and scored the trials by using the Jadad scale.13 Disagreement between the authors was readily resolved by discussion.
Quantitative analysis—We used RevMan 4.2 (Nordic Cochrane Centre, Rigshospitalet, 2003) to assess the pooled relative risks and 95% confidence intervals.14 We present results of both random effects and fixed effects models for the main analysis; for simplicity, we present results of only the fixed effects model for other analyses.
, http://www.100md.com
Results
Search results and study characteristics
Studies included in quantitative analysis
Taylor (and Vogt) included only children, De Sutter included children and adults, and the other studies included only adults. Three studies reported purulent rhinitis without further explanation.7 15 16 De Sutter relied on the clinical decision of the recruiting doctors, although we noted that 53-56% of participants reported unilateral facial pain8; the other studies did not report the incidence of unilateral facial pain.
, http://www.100md.com
Quantitative analyses
The pooled effect for the studies contributing data specifically on purulent rhinitis shows a significant benefit from antibiotics at five to eight days (fig 2)—relative risk 1.18 (95% confidence interval 1.05 to 1.33, random effects); 1.21 (1.08 to 1.35, fixed effects). If data from Herne are included as purulent rhinitis, the relative risk is 1.21 (1.09 to 1.34, fixed effects). Using a relative risk of 1.18, the numbers needed to treat for a benefit from antibiotics ranged from seven for a baseline rate of 0.8516 20 to 15 for a baseline rate of 0.38.7
, http://www.100md.com
Various antibiotics were used: demethylchlortetracycline in Howie (1970), amoxicillin and co-trimoxazole in Taylor (1977), cefalexin in Todd (1984), and amoxicillin in De Sutter (2002). Pooling the two studies that used amoxicillin gives a relative risk of 1.26 (1.11 to 1.45, fixed effects).
The pooled relative risk for adverse effects was 1.46 (1.10 to 1.94, fixed effects), obtained from four studies.7 8 15 16 The numbers needed to harm ranged from 12 to 78 for control event rates in the statistically significant studies (0.1898 to 0.02815). The harms were mainly gastrointestinal and a small number of rashes.
, 百拇医药
A funnel plot suggests a paucity of small studies with small or no effects. All of the included studies scored five out of five on the Jadad scale.
Discussion
The findings from this study indicate that antibiotics for acute purulent rhinitis may be beneficial. Harms attributed to antibiotics were mainly vomiting, diarrhoea, and abdominal pain but also included rashes and hyperactivity (table). No more serious harm occurred in the placebo arm in any of the trials, which fits with the clinical notion that this is not a serious condition. At best, a number needed to treat of seven means that six patients get no benefit for every one who gets benefit. Furthermore, the number needed to treat for benefit from antibiotics (7-15) overlaps with the number needed to harm (12-78). Our results are consistent with the Cochrane review of chronic purulent rhinitis, which found a benefit for antibiotics (calculated as a reduced risk of persistent purulent rhinitis), with a pooled relative risk of 0.75 (95% confidence interval 0.61 to 0.92) and a number needed to treat of nine (at the mean control event of 0.46).10
, http://www.100md.com
Several of the studies were not of high quality yet scored well on the Jadad scale. None of the studies used an intention to treat analysis, which is not a requirement of the Jadad scale. As various terms are used for acute purulent rhinitis, we cannot be sure that we retrieved all the relevant articles. We found four of the studies in our Cochrane review of antibiotics for the common cold. Although the trend of results is towards an effect of antibiotics, the funnel plot indicates that some publication bias may exist. The studies also used different antibiotics, and the only clearly non-significant study used cefalexin.7 The relative risk from pooling the two amoxicillin studies was statistically significant, so amoxicillin may be preferred if any antibiotic is to be used.
, 百拇医药
The difference between sinusitis and acute purulent rhinitis is not always clear, and involvement of the sinus mucosa in the common cold may be the norm.21 We noted that between 53% and 56% of the participants in De Sutter (2002) had unilateral facial pain.8 In one study of purulent rhinitis of greater than 10 days' duration (and therefore excluded from this analysis), all participants had to be free of abnormalities on their facial x rays.22 In this study, azithromycin was significantly more effective than placebo in clearing purulent rhinitis. It seems that antibiotics may help purulent rhinitis, with or without the presence of sinusitis. Any future studies, however, should specifically assess the presence of sinus infection.
, 百拇医药
Our findings differ from the received wisdom in terms of the effectiveness of antibiotics for acute purulent rhinitis. This highlights the dangers of relying on one study (Todd)7 to decide on the effectiveness of a treatment when other studies show a different effect. Our summation would be to suggest initial management by non-antibiotic treatments or "watchful waiting," and that antibiotics should be used only when symptoms have persisted for long enough to concern parents or patients. In this case, antibiotic treatment may be considered, given that the harms were usually gastrointestinal adverse effects and that individual patients may be aware of their own ability to tolerate specific antibiotics. Our findings are consistent with the review on antibiotics for chronic purulent rhinitis, and we do not feel that more randomised controlled trials on this subject are warranted. Thus we support the current guidelines in their advice not to use antibiotics but arrive at this point by taking into account the evidence, the benefits, and the harms of both treating and not treating.
, 百拇医药
What is already known on this topic
General practitioners often prescribe antibiotics for an acute upper respiratory tract infection when the rhinitis is purulent
Most guidelines recommend against using antibiotics for this condition, but this advice is based on one study
What this study adds
Review of seven papers indicates that antibiotics are probably effective for acute purulent rhinitis
, http://www.100md.com
This is not a sufficient reason to use antibiotics, however, as no serious adverse events occurred in the placebo group
Contributors: Both authors reviewed the abstracts resulting from the search, extracted the data, and wrote the paper. BA did the analysis and is the guarantor.
Funding: The initial Cochrane review "Antibiotics for the common cold" (1998) was funded by the Charitable Trust of the Auckland Faculty of the Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners. This specific review was not funded by any external agency. The authors' salaries were from University of Auckland staff funding.
, 百拇医药
Competing interests: BA is a member of the Future Forum, an educational foundation funded by AstraZeneca UK, and a committee member of the Pharmac seminar series (Pharmac is the New Zealand government funding agency for drugs).
References
Steinweg K. Natural history and prognostic significance of purulent rhinitis. J Fam Pract 1983;17: 61-4.
Arroll B, Goodyear-Smith F. General practitioner management of upper respiratory tract infections: when are antibiotics prescribed N Z Med J 2000;113: 493-6.
, 百拇医药
Mainous AG, Hueston H, Eberlein C. Colour of respiratory discharge and antibiotic use. Lancet 1997;350: 1077.
Gonzales R, Barrett PHJ, Steiner JF. The relation between purulent manifestations and antibiotic treatment of upper respiratory tract infections. J Gen Intern Med 1999;14: 151-6.
Snow V, Mottur-Pilson C, Hickner JM. Principles of appropriate antibiotic use for acute sinusitis in adults. Ann Intern Med 2001;134: 495-7.
, 百拇医药
Rosenstein N, Phillips WR, Gerber MA, Marcy M, Schwartz B, Dowell SF. The common cold—principles of judicious use of antimicrobial agents. Pediatrics 1998;101(suppl): 181-4.
Todd JK, Todd N, Damato J, Todd WA. Bacteriology and treatment of purulent nasopharyngitis: a double blind placebo-controlled evaluation. Ped Infect Dis 1984;3: 226-32.
De Sutter AI, De Meyere MJ, Christiaens TC, van Duriel ML, Peersman W, De Maeseneer JM. Does amoxicillin improve outcomes in patients with purulent rhinorrhea J Fam Pract 2002;51: 317-23.
, 百拇医药
Turnbridge J, Christiansen K. Antibiotic use and resistance—proving the obvious. Lancet 2005;365: 548-9.
Morris P, Leach A. Antibiotics for persistent nasal discharge (rhinosinusitis) in children. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2002;(4):CD001094.
Arroll B, Kenealy T. Antibiotics for the common cold and acute purulent rhinitis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev Issue 2005;(3):CD000247.
Williams JW Jr, Aguilar C, Cornell J, Chiquette E, Dolor RJ, Makela M, et al. Antibiotics for acute maxillary sinusitis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2003;(2):CD000243.
, 百拇医药
Jadad AR, Moore RA, Carroll D, Jenkinson C, Reynolds JM, Gavaghan DJ, et al. Assessing the quality of reports on randomised clinical trials: is blinding necessary Control Clin Trials 1996;17: 1-12.
DerSimonian R, Laird N. Meta-analysis in clinical trials. Control Clin Trials 1986;7: 177-88.
Howie JG, Clark GA. Double blind trial of early demethyltetracycline in minor respiratory tract illness in general practice. Lancet 1970;i: 1099-102.
, 百拇医药
Taylor B, Abbott GD, Kerr MM, Fergusson DM. Amoxycillin and co-trimoxazole in presumed viral respiratory infections in childhood: a placebo controlled trial. BMJ 1977;ii: 552-4.
Vogt FC. Medical management of purulent rhinitis: a double-blind comparison of vasoconstrictor agent alone with a combination of vasoconstrictor and antimicrobial drugs. Clin Pediatr 1966;5: 547-9.
Herne N. Double blinded trial comparing xibornol, tetracycline and placebo in seasonal upper respiratory tract infection. Medicines et Maladies Infectieuses 1980;10: 185-90.
, 百拇医药
Stott NC, West RR. Randomised controlled trial of antibiotics in patients with cough and purulent sputum. BMJ 1976;ii: 556-9.
Sackett D, Straus SE, Richardson S, Rosenberg W, Haynes RB. Evidence-based medicine: how to practice and teach EBM. New York: Churchill Livingstone, 2000.
Gwaltney JM, Phillips CD, Miller RD, Riker RD. Computed tomographic study of the common cold. N Engl J Med 1994;330: 25-30.
Haye R, Lingass E, Hoivik HO, Odegard T. Azithromycin versus placebo in acute infectious rhinitis with clinical symptoms but without radiological signs of maxillary sinusitis. Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis 1998;17: 309-12., 百拇医药(B Arroll, T Kenealy)