Abstract

BackgroundGuidelines and performance measures recommend avoiding antibiotics for acute cough/acute bronchitis and presume visits are straightforward with simple diagnostic decision-making. We evaluated clinician-assigned diagnoses, diagnostic uncertainty, and antibiotic prescribing for acute cough visits in primary care.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective analysis of acute cough visits – cough lasting ≤21 days in adults 18–64 years old without chronic lung disease – in a primary care practice from March 2011 through June 2012.ResultsOf 56,301 visits, 962 (2%) were for acute cough. Clinicians diagnosed patients with 1, 2, or ≥ 3 cough-related diagnoses in 54%, 35%, and 11% of visits, respectively. The most common principal diagnoses were upper respiratory infection (46%), sinusitis (10%), acute bronchitis (9%), and pneumonia (8%). Clinicians prescribed antibiotics in 22% of all visits: 65% of visits with antibiotic-appropriate diagnoses and 4% of visits with non-antibiotic-appropriate diagnoses. Clinicians expressed diagnostic uncertainty in 16% of all visits: 43% of visits with antibiotic-appropriate diagnoses and 5% of visits with non-antibiotic-appropriate diagnoses. Clinicians expressed uncertainty more often when prescribing antibiotics than when not prescribing antibiotics (30% vs. 12%; p < 0.001). As the number of visit diagnoses increased from 1 to 2 to ≥ 3, clinicians were more likely to express diagnostic uncertainty (5%, 25%, 40%, respectively; p < 0.001) and prescribe antibiotics (16%, 25%, 41%, respectively; p < 0.001).ConclusionsAcute cough may be more complex and have more diagnostic uncertainty than guidelines and performance measures presume. Efforts to reduce antibiotic prescribing for acute cough should address diagnostic complexity and uncertainty that clinicians face.

Highlights

  • Guidelines and performance measures recommend avoiding antibiotics for acute cough/acute bronchitis and presume visits are straightforward with simple diagnostic decision-making

  • If the goal of interventions is to decrease antibiotic prescribing for acute cough/acute bronchitis, our study suggests measures that include a broad range of diagnoses are necessary: acute bronchitis accounted for only 9% of acute cough visits and for only 6% of antibiotic prescribing for patients with acute cough

  • In conclusion, we found that 46% of acute cough visits had more than one cough-related diagnosis and clinicians expressed diagnostic uncertainty in 16% of visits

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Summary

Introduction

Guidelines and performance measures recommend avoiding antibiotics for acute cough/acute bronchitis and presume visits are straightforward with simple diagnostic decision-making. Guidelines and performance measures recommend avoiding routine antibiotic prescribing for patients with acute cough/acute bronchitis [1,2,3]. These guidelines and performance measures are based on randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses showing that antibiotics are not beneficial, and may even be harmful, for adults with acute cough [4,5]. The American College of Physicians/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guideline, “Principles of appropriate antibiotic use for treatment of acute bronchitis in adults” does not apply to patients with cardiopulmonary disease and focuses on excluding the diagnosis of pneumonia, but does not mention the possibility of other concomitant, cough-related diagnoses [1,7]. The Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) performance measure,

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