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Impact of antibiotic prophylaxis on postbronchoscopy fever: a randomised controlled study

Cited 19 time in Web of Science Cited 20 time in Scopus
Authors

Park, J. S.; Lee, C-H.; Yim, J-J.; Yang, S-C.; Yoo, C-G.; Chung, H. S.; Kim, Y. W.; Han, S. K.; Shim, Y-S.; Kim, D. K.

Issue Date
2011-04
Publisher
International Union Against Tuberculosis And Lung Disease/Union Internationale Contre la Tuberculose et les Maladies Respiratories
Citation
International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, Vol.15 No.4, pp.528-535
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Postbronchoscopy fever can develop in 5-16% of adult patients. The microbiological contribution to postbronchoscopy fever is unclear. OBJECTIVE: To elucidate the effect of prophylactic antibiotics on the development of postbronchoscopy fever and pneumonia. DESIGN: Study patients were randomised to receive no treatment or oral amoxicillin/clavulanate 30 min before flexible bronchoscopy. The primary outcome variable was the frequency of postbronchoscopy fever and pneumonia. White blood cell counts, C-reactive protein and the serum pyrogenic cytokines interleukin (IL) 1 beta, IL-6 and tumour necrosis factor-alpha were measured before and after bronchoscopy. RESULTS: Of 143 subjects enrolled in the study, the final analysis was performed among 67 subjects in the prophylaxis group and 64 in the control group. The frequency of postbronchoscopy fever did not differ between the groups (25.4% for the prophylaxis group vs. 26.6% for controls, P>0.05). Pneumonia developed in 1.5% of the prophylaxis group and 4.7% of the controls. There was no bacteraemia in either group. Serum pyrogenic cytokines did not differ between the groups. CONCLUSIONS: Prophylactic antibiotics before bronchoscopy did not reduce the frequency of postbronchoscopy fever and did not affect serum levels of pyrogenic cytokines. These findings suggest that microbiological factors may not be responsible for the development of postbronchoscopy fever.
ISSN
1027-3719
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/207999
DOI
https://doi.org/10.5588/ijtld.10.0386
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Medicine
Research Area Nontuberculous Mycobacteria, Tuberculosis, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, 결핵, 다제내성결핵, 비결핵항산균 폐질환

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