PEDIATRICS Vol. 104 No. 4 October 1999, pp. 911-917
Received Dec 21, 1998; accepted Apr 8, 1999.
,
;
Parveen N. Siddiqui§,
From the * Department of Pediatrics, University of Connecticut
School of Medicine, Connecticut Children's Medical Center, Hartford,
Connecticut; the
Department of Pediatrics, Northwestern University
Medical School, Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois; the
§ Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois; the
Department
of Pediatrics, University of Connecticut School of Medicine,
Farmington, Connecticut; the ¶ Department of Pediatrics, Albany Medical
College, Albany, New York; and the # Department of Pediatrics,
University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Objective. To investigate the relative efficacy of orally administered cefadroxil and penicillin V in the treatment of group A streptococcal (GABHS) pharyngitis and the mechanism(s) responsible for failure of antimicrobial therapy to eradicate GABHS from the pharynx.
Study Design. A prospective, randomized clinical trial was conducted in four pediatric offices in which 462 patients with acute pharyngitis and positive culture for GABHS were randomly assigned to receive cefadroxil (n = 232) or penicillin V (n = 230).
Results. Bacteriologic treatment success rates for
patients in cefadroxil and penicillin groups were 94% and 86%,
respectively. However, among patients classified clinically as
likely to have bona fide GABHS pharyngitis, there was no difference in
bacteriologic treatment success rates in cefadroxil and penicillin
groups (95% and 94%, respectively). Among patients classified
clinically as likely to be streptococcal carriers, bacteriologic
treatment success rates in cefadroxil and penicillin groups were 92%
and 73%, respectively. The presence of
-lactamase and/or
bacteriocin-producing pharyngeal flora had no consistent effect on
bacteriologic eradication rates among patients in either penicillin or
cefadroxil treatment groups or among patients classified as having
either GABHS pharyngitis or streptococcal carriage.
Conclusions. Neither
-lactamase nor bacteriocin
produced by normal pharyngeal flora are related to bacteriologic
treatment failures in GABHS pharyngitis. Cefadroxil seems to be more
effective than penicillin V in eradicating GABHS from patients
classified as more likely to be streptococcal carriers. However, among
patients we classified as more likely to have bona fide GABHS
pharyngitis, the effectiveness of cefadroxil and penicillin V seems to
be comparable.
Key words:
Streptococcus pyogenes,
group A
streptococci,
pharyngitis,
treatment.
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