Antibiotics ‘do little to alleviate acute cough’
March 25th, 2011 - 2:30 pm ICT by ANIWashington, March 25 (ANI): A Cardiff University study has found that prescribing antibiotics for patients with discoloured phlegm caused by acute cough has little or no effect on alleviating symptoms and recovery.
Acute cough is one of the common reasons why people visit their GP and accounts for a large proportion of antibiotics prescribed in the community. One of the most common questions asked by GPs to their patients is about their phlegm: “Are you coughing anything up?” or “What colour is your phlegm?”
Clinicians and patients commonly believe that yellow and green phlegm production is associated with a bacterial infection, which is more likely to benefit from antibiotic treatment compared to non-productive cough or cough that produces clear phlegm.
However, Professor Chris Butler and his team from Cardiff University’s School of Medicine, together with colleagues from 14 European centres present data from an observational study of 3402 adult patients with acute cough presenting for health care in 14 primary care networks.
The research found that patients producing discoloured phlegm are prescribed antibiotics more frequently than those not producing phlegm unlike those producing clear/white phlegm.
Crucially, antibiotic treatment was not associated with greater rate or magnitude of symptoms score resolution among those who produced yellow or green phlegm. Neither was recovery among those feeling generally unwell on its own, or taken together with phlegm production, associated with antibiotic treatment.
Clinicians and patients are therefore likely to both be over interpreting the importance of the colour of phlegm in the decision whether or not to prescribe, or take, antibiotics.
“One of the exciting things about this research is that our findings from this large, multi-country observational study resonate with findings from randomised trials where benefit from antibiotic treatment in those producing discoloured phlegm has been found to be marginal at best or non-existent,” Butler, who led the study, said.
“Our findings add weight to the message that acute cough in otherwise well adults is a self-limiting condition and antibiotic treatment does not speed recovery to any meaningful extent.
“In fact, antibiotic prescribing in this situation simply unnecessarily exposes people to side effects from antibiotics, undermines future self care, and drives up antibiotic resistance,” added Butler.
The study has been published in the European Respiratory Journal. (ANI)
- Antibiotics do little to ease acute cough - Mar 25, 2011
- Antibiotics of no use in sinus infections - Feb 15, 2012
- Blood test, better communication helps cut over-prescription of antibiotics - May 22, 2009
- 'Urgent measures needed to control drug resistant TB' - Mar 23, 2012
- Cigarette smoking ups production of mucus in patients with bronchitis - Feb 18, 2011
- Antibiotic found promising in irritable bowel syndrome - Jan 07, 2011
- Early antibiotic treatment for chronic disorder shows improvement - May 26, 2010
- Honey can help reverse bacterial resistance to antibiotics - Apr 13, 2011
- Antibiotics alleviate symptoms of schizophrenia - Mar 03, 2012
- Antibiotics ineffective against viral sinus infections - Mar 22, 2012
- Docs 'misuse' antibiotics when treating patients with respiratory infections - Sep 23, 2010
- Body chemical may help critically ill to improve - Aug 04, 2011
- Common antibiotics, BP medications a bad mix: Study - Jan 18, 2011
- Benefit of antidepressants vary with severity of depression symptoms - Jan 06, 2010
- 'Time to scale up work on TB control' - Jan 24, 2012
Tags: adult patients, antibiotic treatment, antibiotics, bacterial infection, cardiff university, chris butler, clinicians, colleagues, gps, green phlegm, magnitude, march 25, non productive cough, observational study, primary care networks, professor chris, proportion, randomised trials, school of medicine, white phlegm