PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Antiviral treatment among older adults hospitalized with influenza, 2006-2012.

  • Mary Louise Lindegren,
  • Marie R Griffin,
  • John V Williams,
  • Kathryn M Edwards,
  • Yuwei Zhu,
  • Ed Mitchel,
  • Alicia M Fry,
  • William Schaffner,
  • H Keipp Talbot

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121952
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. e0121952

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo describe antiviral use among older, hospitalized adults during six influenza seasons (2006-2012) in Davidson County, Tennessee, USA.MethodsAmong adults ≥50 years old hospitalized with symptoms of respiratory illness or non-localizing fever, we collected information on provider-initiated influenza testing and nasal/throat swabs for influenza by RT-PCR in a research laboratory, and calculated the proportion treated with antivirals.ResultsWe enrolled 1753 adults hospitalized with acute respiratory illness. Only 26% (457/1753) of enrolled patients had provider-initiated influenza testing. Thirty-eight patients had a positive clinical laboratory test, representing 2.2% of total patients and 8.3% of tested patients. Among the 38 subjects with clinical laboratory-confirmed influenza, 26.3% received antivirals compared to only 4.5% of those with negative clinical influenza tests and 0.7% of those not tested (pConclusionsIn urban Tennessee, antiviral use was low in patients recognized to have influenza by the provider as well as those unrecognized to have influenza. The use of antivirals remained low despite recommendations to treat all hospitalized patients with confirmed or suspected influenza.