Islamabad, Dec 23 : A team of scientists and clinicians, led by researchers at King's
College London and St George's, University of London, are calling for a review
of penicillin dosing guidelines for children, that have remained unchanged for
nearly 50 years.
The call comes as a study published in the British
Medical Journal indicates some children may not be receiving effective doses,
which could potentially lead to failed treatment and contribute to antibiotic
resistance.
Oral penicillins (such as amoxicillin) account for nearly 4.5
million of the total 6 million annual prescriptions for antibiotics given to
treat childhood bacterial infections each year in the UK.
Current dosing
guidelines for penicillin are provided by the British National Formulary for
Children (BNFC) and are mainly based on age bands. The doses given have not
changed in almost 50 years. But the dose of penicillin needed is determined by a
child's weight, and the guidelines have not taken into account the increase in
the average weight of children over time. The experts say reviewing these
guidelines is essential, to ensure all children who require penicillin are
receiving effective doses.
The review was led by Dr Paul Long from the
Institute of Pharmaceutical Science at King's College London and Professor Mike
Sharland at St George's, University of London on behalf of the improving
Children's Antibiotic Prescribing Research Network (iCAP).
The team carried
out a literature review of evidence, including all the historic archives of the
Royal Pharmaceutical Society and the British Medical Association, to understand
the origins of the current dosing guidelines. They found that prescribing based
on age bands had first been suggested in the early 1950s, based on the results
of oral dosing studies. Following these findings, a general recommendation to
use age banding for all antibiotics in children was published in the BMJ in
1963, and these same recommendations remain in use today.
The researchers
found that the age band guidelines set in 1963 were accompanied by average
weights, and doses are based on fractions of the widely used adult doses. The
BNFC structured dosing bands are: birth to 1 year (10kg); 2 years (13kg); 5
years (18kg); and 10 years (30kg). However, according to the Health Survey for
England 2009, the average weight today of a 5 year old is 21kg and a 10 year old
is 37kg, indicating that average weights today are up to twenty percent higher
than in 1963.
Under-dosing is potentially a problem for children, as this
could lead to sub-therapeutic concentrations.
The researchers also noted
that adult penicillin recommendations have been re-evaluated taking modern
weights into consideration, and penicillin doses have consequently increased.
But UK recommendations for children have not been reassessed in the same
way.
Dr Paul Long, Senior Lecturer in Pharmacognosy at King's College
London, said: 'We were surprised at the lack of evidence to support the current
oral penicillins dosing recommendations for children, as it is such a commonly
used drug. Children's average size and weight are slowly but significantly
changing, so what may have been adequate doses of penicillin 50 years ago are
potentially not enough today.
'It is important to point out that this
study does not provide any clinical evidence that children are receiving
sub-optimal penicillin doses that lead to harm, and we want to reassure parents
of that. But what we are saying is that we should ensure that children with
severe infections who need these antibiotics the most are still receiving an
effective dose.
'In the long-term we are concerned that under-dosing
could lead to penicillin-resistance in both individuals and wider communities,
which is a very serious issue, given the number of prescriptions of this
medicine given every year for common childhood infections.
'If we want to
be sure that we are treating childhood bacterial infections effectively, the
evidence base behind these prescribing guidelines needs to be improved, and the
recommended doses reviewed accordingly.'
Professor Mike Sharland from St
George's, University of London, and co-author of the study said: 'Although there
is now a very formal process of determining the right dose for new drugs being
licensed for use in children, we also need to check more carefully that the
guidelines are still correct for older drugs that have been used for a long
time. We are not saying the current doses are wrong or unsafe and parents should
always give the medicine at the doses prescribed by their GP. We are saying that
we need to develop a clearer system to check the doses used for older
medicines.'
Simon Keady, Royal Pharmaceutical Society spokesperson on
children's medicines, said: 'This research and its outcomes clearly demonstrates
the importance of continued work in the field of paediatrics as further evidence
and experience is gathered. The use of penicillins over many years for a wide
variety of conditions should not stop us from continuing to identify the most
appropriate dose which gives us the most effective outcomes. The work clearly
shows that the focus should not always be about new drugs but also looking at
where we have historically centred dosing around age bands.'
NICE
(National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence) guidance on Upper
Respiratory Tract Infections (URTIs) suggests that the majority of minor URTI's
in children are viral and will resolve on their own without the need for
antibiotics. Therefore, the authors also suggest that not only do the effective
doses for children of all ages and weights need to be determined, but there is
the need to target more clearly which children will really benefit most from
antibiotics.
Ends
SA/EN
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Penicillin doses for children should be reviewed
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