
CDC Analysis Suggests Fluoroquinolone Prescribing Continues Apace in the US, Despite FDA Warnings: Public Health Watch
High prescribing continues despite the fact that heavy use of these agents can facilitate the development of multidrug-resistant bacteria and tendon, muscle, joint, and central nervous system damage.
In 2005, a
However, in a statement that would prove prescient a scant few years later, the author would go on to write that “a growing concern is… [the] heavy use of these agents in association with increasing resistance to other agents… [which] can facilitate the development of multidrug-resistant [bacteria] and leave little available therapy for treatment of these infections.”
If that warning isn’t enough, there is also the issue of adverse events: In 2008, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a boxed warning highlighting the risk for tendon, muscle, joint, and central nervous system damage associated with fluoroquinolones, a drug class that includes the agents, ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, norfloxacin, and ofloxacin, among others. The FDA modified the
Oddly enough, though, it seems that some health care professionals have failed to heed these warnings. A
So where are we with fluoroquinolone use today?
New
What they found is troubling.
In 2014, retail pharmacies dispensed more than 31 million fluoroquinolones, with the highest percentage (24.5%) being used for “genitourinary conditions.” In all, some 1.5 million of these fluoroquinolone prescriptions were dispensed for sinusitis and more than 850,000 were dispensed for bronchitis. Another 750,000-plus were administered for viral URTIs. Together, viral URTIs and bronchitis accounted for 5.1% of all fluoroquinolone prescriptions dispensed in 2014—a full 6 years after the FDA issued its initial boxed warning.
What was the authors’ solution to this apparent contradiction to best practices?
“With the threats to patient safety and rising rates of antibiotic resistance, fluoroquinolones should not be prescribed for conditions where alternative effective therapies are recommended,” they write. “Antibiotic stewardship efforts should target inappropriate fluoroquinolone prescribing in adults, specifically for acute respiratory tract infections for which no antibiotics are needed, and for ambulatory infections for which fluoroquinolones are not recommended first-line therapy. This will optimize clinical outcomes by reducing unnecessary antibiotic therapy and preventing fluoroquinolone adverse drug reactions.”
In other words, follow the guidelines.
Sounds simple enough—except that if these data are any indication, providers simply aren’t getting it.
Brian P. Dunleavy is a medical writer and editor based in New York. His work has appeared in numerous health care-related publications. He is the former editor of Infectious Disease Special Edition.
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