Necrotising Otitis Externa Antibiotic therapy complications: A
retrospective cohort analysis
Abstract
Introduction: Necrotising otitis externa (NOE) is a serious, progressive
infection of the external ear canal. If untreated, it can invade into
temporal bone, skull-base and surrounding tissue resulting in cranial
nerve palsies, neurological infections and death. Patients present with
unremitting, severe otalgia, otorrhoea and oedematous ear canals
containing granulation. Surgery has a limited role; the mainstay of
treatment involves a long course of intravenous antibiotics. Currently,
there is no data on the complications of antibiotic treatment for NOE.
This project aims to provide evidence on the nature/frequency of severe
treatment-related complications requiring a change in antibiotic regime.
Methods: A retrospective 5-year cohort analysis was performed on 64
patients who were treated for confirmed NOE with intravenous antibiotic
therapy. Clinical notes, blood results and antibiotic prescriptions were
documented and analysed. Results: Average duration of treatment was 11
weeks (range=38 weeks). There was an average of 2.1 antibiotic regimes
per patient with 10 cases requiring inpatient admission due to
treatment-related complications. 63% of treatment changes were directly
related to adverse effects of intravenous antibiotics. Drug
allergy/intolerance (n=18) and clinical deterioration i.e. Lack of
symptomatic improvement and/or worsening inflammatory markers (n=18),
were the most common reasons for antibiotic change. Neutropenia,
deranged liver function tests and acute kidney injury were also
recognised adverse effects of treatment. Conclusion: This study provides
the first evidence on the notable frequency of antibiotic-related
complications in NOE patients. Larger, multicentre studies are required
in the future to validate our findings and will better inform both
clinicians and patients of the risks of treatment.