Abstract

BackgroundClinical guidelines for the diagnosis of group A streptococcal (GAS) pharyngitis recommend the use of a rapid antigen detection test (RADT) and/or bacterial culture. This study evaluated the overall diagnosis and treatment of acute pharyngitis in the United States, including predictors of test type and antibiotic prescription.MethodsA retrospective analysis of pharyngitis events from 2011 through 2015 was conducted using the MarketScan commercial/Medicare databases. A pharyngitis event was defined as occurring within 2 weeks from the index visit. Patient and provider characteristics were examined across 5 testing categories: RADT, RADT plus culture, other tests, nucleic acid amplification testing (NAAT), and no test. Multivariate models were used to identify significant predictors of NAAT use and antibiotic prescription.ResultsA total of 18.8 million acute pharyngitis events were identified in 11.6 million patients. Roughly two-thirds of events (68.2%) occurred once, and roughly a third of patients (29.1%) required additional follow-up, but hospitalization was rare (0.3%). Across all events, 43% were diagnosed by RADT, while 20% were diagnosed by RADT plus culture. The proportion of events diagnosed by NAAT increased 3.5-fold from 2011 to 2015 (0.06% vs 0.27%). Antibiotic use was frequent (49.3%), less often in combination with RADT plus culture (31.2%) or NAAT alone (34.5%) but significantly more often with RADT alone (53.4%) or no test (57.1%). Pediatricians were significantly less likely than other providers to prescribe antibiotics in their patients, regardless of patient age (p < 0.0001).ConclusionsAntibiotic use for sore throat remains common, with many clinicians not following current guidelines for diagnosis of GAS pharyngitis. Diagnosis of GAS pharyngitis using RADT plus culture or NAAT alone was associated with lower use of antibiotics. Diagnostic testing can help lower the incidence of inappropriate antibiotic use, and inclusion of NAAT in the clinical guidelines for GAS pharyngitis warrants consideration.

Highlights

  • Clinical guidelines for the diagnosis of group A streptococcal (GAS) pharyngitis recommend the use of a rapid antigen detection test (RADT) and/or bacterial culture

  • Current guidelines for diagnosis of GAS pharyngitis in the United States recommend the use of a rapid antigen detection test (RADT) and/or bacterial culture of a throat swab [1]

  • The current study evaluated the diagnosis and treatment of GAS pharyngitis in the United States from 2011 through 2015 in over 11 million patients and investigated the relationship between antibiotic prescribing and provider type, place of service, and GAS pharyngitis diagnostic testing methods

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical guidelines for the diagnosis of group A streptococcal (GAS) pharyngitis recommend the use of a rapid antigen detection test (RADT) and/or bacterial culture. Current guidelines for diagnosis of GAS pharyngitis in the United States recommend the use of a rapid antigen detection test (RADT) and/or bacterial culture of a throat swab [1]. Negative RADT results require a confirmatory bacterial culture in pediatric patients, patients at high risk of complications from GAS pharyngitis, and any setting in which clinicians wish to maximize diagnostic sensitivity [1, 8] Bacterial culture is both highly sensitive and specific (90–95%) when performed correctly, but is labor intensive and costly and requires an experienced clinical laboratory to grow and accurately test the bacteria, resulting in reporting delays of 1 to 5 days [9]. Given the low sensitivity rates of RADT and the delays in result reporting (or unavailability) of culture testing, clinicians are often left with the difficult decision of whether or not to prescribe antibiotics when using rapid antigen assays while waiting for confirmatory results, or treating (or not treating) the patient without the use of a diagnostic test and accepting any negative clinical consequences or follow-up care

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