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Strategies for Diagnosing and Treating Suspected Acute Bacterial Sinusitis
Author(s) -
Balk Ethan M.,
Zucker Deborah R.,
Engels Eric A.,
Wong John B.,
Williams John W.,
Lau Joseph
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of general internal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.746
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 1525-1497
pISSN - 0884-8734
DOI - 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2001.00429.x
Subject(s) - medicine , sinusitis , intensive care medicine , antibiotics , indirect costs , medical prescription , surgery , accounting , microbiology and biotechnology , business , pharmacology , biology
OBJECTIVE: Symptoms suggestive of acute bacterial sinusitis are common. Available diagnostic and treatment options generate substantial costs with uncertain benefits. We assessed the cost‐effectiveness of alternative management strategies to identify the optimal approach. DESIGN: For such patients, we created a Markov model to examine four strategies: 1) no antibiotic treatment; 2) empirical antibiotic treatment; 3) clinical criteria‐guided treatment; and 4) radiography‐guided treatment. The model simulated a 14‐day course of illness, included sinusitis prevalence, antibiotic side effects, sinusitis complications, direct and indirect costs, and symptom severity. Strategies costing less than $50,000 per quality‐adjusted life year gained were considered “cost‐effective.” MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: For mild or moderate disease, basing antibiotic treatment on clinical criteria was cost‐effective in clinical settings where sinusitis prevalence is within the range of 15% to 93% or 3% to 63%, respectively. For severe disease, or to prevent sinusitis or antibiotic side effect symptoms, use of clinical criteria was cost‐effective in settings with lower prevalence (below 51% or 44%, respectively); empirical antibiotics was cost‐effective with higher prevalence. Sinus radiography‐guided treatment was never cost‐effective for initial treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Use of a simple set of clinical criteria to guide treatment is a cost‐effective strategy in most clinical settings. Empirical antibiotics are cost‐effective in certain settings; however, their use results in many unnecessary prescriptions. If this resulted in increased antibiotic resistance, costs would substantially rise and efficacy would fall. Newer, expensive antibiotics are of limited value. Additional testing is not cost‐effective. Further studies are needed to find an accurate,low‐cost diagnostic test for acute bacterial sinusitis.

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