Abstract

BackgroundDespite their marginal benefit, about 60% of acute lower respiratory tract infections (ALRTIs) are currently treated with antibiotics in Catalonia. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of a continuous disease-focused intervention (C-reactive protein [CRP]) and an illness-focused intervention (enhancement of communication skills to optimise doctor-patient consultations) on antibiotic prescribing in patients with ALRTIs in Catalan primary care centres.Methods/designA cluster randomised, factorial, controlled trial aimed at including 20 primary care centres (N = 2940 patients) with patients older than 18 years of age presenting for a first consultation with an ALRTI will be included in the study. Primary care centres will be identified on the basis of socioeconomic data and antibiotic consumption. Centres will be randomly assigned according to hierarchical clustering to any of four trial arms: usual care, CRP testing, enhanced communication skills backed up with patient leaflets, or combined interventions. A cost-effectiveness and cost-utility analysis will be performed from the societal and national healthcare system perspectives, and the time horizon of the analysis will be 1 year. Two qualitative studies (pre- and post-clinical trial) aimed to identify the expectations and concerns of patients with ALRTIs and the barriers and facilitators of each intervention arm will be run. Family doctors and nurses assigned to the interventions will participate in a 2-h training workshop before the inception of the trial and will receive a monthly intervention-tailored training module during the year of the trial period. Primary outcomes will be antibiotic use within the first 6 weeks, duration of moderate to severe cough, and the quality-adjusted life-years. Secondary outcomes will be duration of illness and severity of cough measured using a symptom diary, healthcare re-consultations, hospital admissions, and complications. Healthcare costs will be considered and expressed in 2021 euros (year foreseen to finalise the study) of the current year of the analysis. Univariate and multivariate sensitivity analyses will be carried out.DiscussionThe ISAAC-CAT project will contribute to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of different strategies for more appropriate antibiotic prescribing that are currently out of the scope of the actual clinical guidelines.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03931577.

Highlights

  • Despite their marginal benefit, about 60% of acute lower respiratory tract infections (ALRTIs) are currently treated with antibiotics in Catalonia

  • Most antibiotics are prescribed in primary care, most commonly for acute lower respiratory tract infections (ALRTI), which account for one-fourth of all the infectious diseases treated by general practitioners (GPs)

  • This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of a continuous disease-focused intervention (CRP testing) and a continuous illness-focused intervention on antibiotic prescribing in patients with ALRTIs in Catalan primary care centres

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Summary

Introduction

About 60% of acute lower respiratory tract infections (ALRTIs) are currently treated with antibiotics in Catalonia. Because no new classes of antibiotics have been developed in the last two decades, rationalisation of antibiotic use in the treatment of ALRTIs in primary care is a key target for influencing the antibiotic-prescribing behaviour of clinicians [1]. This supports the case for strategies that promote a more prudent use of antibiotics for these infections. This is even more important in Catalonia, because this is one of the European Union countries with the highest rates of antibiotic prescribing, which has even slightly increased in the last years [4, 5]. This finding is supported by the results of the latest Eurobarometer on antibiotic use carried out in 2016, in which 47% of the Spanish respondents admitted having taken an antibiotic in the previous year [6]

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