Post-consultation acute respiratory tract infection recovery: a latent class-informed analysis of individual patient data

Author:

Hounkpatin HildaORCID,Stuart BethORCID,Zhu Shihua,Yao GuiqingORCID,Moore MichaelORCID,Löffler ChristinORCID,Little PaulORCID,Kenealy TimothyORCID,Gillespie DavidORCID,Francis Nick AORCID,Bostock JenniferORCID,Becque TaekoORCID,Arroll BruceORCID,Altiner AttilaORCID,Alonso-Coello PabloORCID,Hay Alastair DORCID

Abstract

BackgroundThere is a lack of evidence regarding post-consultation symptom trajectories for patients with respiratory tract infections (RTIs) and whether patient characteristics can be used to predict illness duration.AimTo describe symptom trajectories in patients with RTIs, and assess baseline characteristics and adverse events associated with trajectories.Design and settingThe study included data about 9103 adults and children from 12 primary care studies.MethodA latent class-informed regression analysis of individual patient data from randomised controlled trials and observational cohort studies was undertaken. Post-consultation symptom trajectory (severity and duration), re-consultation with same or worsening illness, and admission to hospital were assessed.ResultsIn total, 90% of participants recovered from all symptoms by 28 days, regardless of antibiotic prescribing strategy (none, immediate, and delayed antibiotics). For studies of RTI with cough as a dominant symptom (n= 5314), four trajectories were identified: ‘rapid (6 days)’ (90% of participants recovered within 6 days) in 52.0%; ‘intermediate (10 days)’ (28.9%); ‘slow progressive improvement (27 days)’ (12.5%); and ‘slow improvement with initial high symptom burden (27 days)’ (6.6%). For cough, being aged 16–64 years (odds ratio [OR] 2.57, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.72 to 3.85 compared with <16 years), higher presenting illness baseline severity (OR 1.51, 95% CI = 1.12 to 2.03), presence of lung disease (OR 1.78, 95% CI = 1.44 to 2.21), and median and above illness duration before consultation (≥7 days) (OR 1.99, 95% CI = 1.68 to 2.37) were associated with slower recovery (>10 days) compared with faster recovery (≤10 days). Re-consultations and admissions to hospital for cough were higher in those with slower recovery (ORs: 2.15, 95% CI = 1.78 to 2.60 and 7.42, 95% CI = 3.49 to 15.78, respectively).ConclusionOlder patients presenting with more severe, longer pre-consultation symptoms and chronic lung disease should be advised they are more likely to experience longer post-consultation illness durations, and that recovery rates are similar with and without antibiotics.

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

Subject

Family Practice

Reference39 articles.

1. Public Health England (2019) English Surveillance Programme for Antimicrobial Utilisation and Resistance (ESPAUR) Report 2018‒2019, https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20200806045257/https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/english-surveillance-programme-antimicrobial-utilisation-and-resistance-espaur-report (accessed 7 Feb 2023).

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