The remaining unsolved problems for rational antibiotic therapy use in pediatric community-acquired pneumonia.
Susanna EspositoAlberto ArgentieroFrancesca RebecchiValentina FainardiGiovanna PisiNicola PrincipiPublished in: Expert opinion on pharmacotherapy (2022)
Further improvement in pediatric CAP management could be derived from physician education on antibiotic use and a larger use, particularly in office practice, of point of care testing or new technologies (i.e. artificial intelligence) to define etiology of a lower respiratory infection. However, recommendations regarding the duration of antibiotic therapy vary largely because of the absence of reliable data on the optimal CAP treatment according to the bacterial etiology of the disease, its severity, and child characteristics. Available evidence seems to confirm that a short course of antibiotics, approximately 5 days, can be effective and lead to results not substantially different from those obtained with prolonged-course antibiotic therapy, at least in patients with mild to moderate disease.