Antibiotics for common infections in primary care before, during and after the COVID-19 pandemic: cohort study of extent of prescribing based on risks of infection-related hospital admissions
Fahmi A., Yang Y-T., Zhong X., Pate A., Sharma A., Watts S., Ashcroft DM., Goldacre B., MacKenna B., Massey J., Mehrkar A., Bacon S., McMillan B., Dark P., Hand K., Palin V., van Staa TP.
Objectives Antibiotics are effective in treating bacterial infections, but they carry the risks of antimicrobial resistance and effectiveness loss. This study aimed to assess whether antibiotics for common infections are prescribed in a risk-based manner and how this changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Design Cohort study of common infections and antibiotic prescribing. Setting With the approval of NHS England, we accessed pseudonymised patient-level electronic health records of primary care data from The Phoenix Partnership through OpenSAFELY. Participants We included adults registered at general practices in England with a record of common infection, including lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), upper respiratory tract infections (URTI) and lower urinary tract infection (UTI), from January 2019 to March 2023. Patients with a record of COVID-19 were excluded. Main outcome measures Patient-specific risks of infection-related hospital admission were estimated for each infection using risk prediction scores for patients who were not prescribed an antibiotic. The infection cohorts were then grouped into risk deciles, and probabilities of being prescribed an antibiotic were assessed. Results We found 15,719,750 diagnoses of common infections. Of them, 450,215 (2.86%) were hospitalised in the 30 days after the diagnosis and 10,429,060 (66.34%) were prescribed an antibiotic. There were substantial differences in observed rates of hospital admissions between the lowest and highest risk deciles (25-fold difference in URTI). The probability of being prescribed an antibiotic for LRTI or UTI was unrelated to hospital admission risk, and that for URTI was weakly related to hospital admission risk. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the level of risk-based antibiotic prescribing reduced. Conclusions There is a need to better target antibiotics in primary care to patients with worse prognosis and strengthen treatment guidelines in personalisation of prescribing.