Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial

Abstract Background In children, up to 30% of viral respiratory tract infections (RTIs) develop into bacterial complications associated with pneumonia, sinusitis or otitis media to trigger a tremendous need for antibiotics. This study investigated the efficacy of Echinacea for the prevention of vira...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mercedes Ogal, Sebastian L. Johnston, Peter Klein, Roland Schoop
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:European Journal of Medical Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-021-00499-6
id doaj-6d866e2831fb4d2d8dc26dc00365e73b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6d866e2831fb4d2d8dc26dc00365e73b2021-04-11T11:39:53ZengBMCEuropean Journal of Medical Research2047-783X2021-04-012611910.1186/s40001-021-00499-6Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trialMercedes Ogal0Sebastian L. Johnston1Peter Klein2Roland Schoop3Pediatric ClinicNational Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College Londond.s.h. Statistical Services GmbHA Vogel AGAbstract Background In children, up to 30% of viral respiratory tract infections (RTIs) develop into bacterial complications associated with pneumonia, sinusitis or otitis media to trigger a tremendous need for antibiotics. This study investigated the efficacy of Echinacea for the prevention of viral RTIs, for the prevention of secondary bacterial complications and for reducing rates of antibiotic prescriptions in children. Methods Echinaforce® Junior tablets [400 mg freshly harvested Echinacea purpurea alcoholic extract] or vitamin C [50 mg] as control were given three times daily for prevention to children 4–12 years. Two × 2 months of prevention were separated by a 1-week treatment break. Parents assessed respiratory symptoms in children via e-diaries and collected nasopharyngeal secretions for screening of respiratory pathogens (Allplex® RT-PCR). Results Overall, 429 cold days occurred in NITT = 103 children with Echinacea in comparison to 602 days in NITT = 98 children with vitamin C (p < 0.001, Chi-square test). Echinacea prevented 32.5% of RTI episodes resulting in an odds ratio of OR = 0.52 [95% CI 0.30–0.91, p = 0.021]. Six children (5.8%) with Echinacea and 15 children (15.3%) with vitamin C required 6 and 24 courses of antibiotic treatment, respectively (reduction of 76.3%, p < 0.001). A total of 45 and 216 days of antibiotic therapy were reported in the two groups, respectively (reduction of 80.2% (p < 0.001). Eleven and 30 events of RTI complications (e.g., otitis media, sinusitis or pneumonia) occurred with Echinacea and vitamin C, respectively (p = 0.0030). Echinacea significantly prevented influenza (3 vs. 20 detections, p = 0.012) and enveloped virus infections (29 vs. 47 detections, p = 0.0038). Finally, 76 adverse events occurred with Echinacea and 105 events with vitamin C (p = 0.016), only three events were reported possibly related with Echinacea. Conclusions Our results support the use of Echinacea for the prevention of RTIs and reduction of associated antibiotic usage in children. Trial registration clinicaltrials.gov, NCT02971384, 23th Nov 2016.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-021-00499-6Respiratory tract infectionsPreventionEchinaceaComplicationsAntibioticsAntiviral
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mercedes Ogal
Sebastian L. Johnston
Peter Klein
Roland Schoop
spellingShingle Mercedes Ogal
Sebastian L. Johnston
Peter Klein
Roland Schoop
Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial
European Journal of Medical Research
Respiratory tract infections
Prevention
Echinacea
Complications
Antibiotics
Antiviral
author_facet Mercedes Ogal
Sebastian L. Johnston
Peter Klein
Roland Schoop
author_sort Mercedes Ogal
title Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial
title_short Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial
title_full Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial
title_fullStr Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial
title_sort echinacea reduces antibiotic usage in children through respiratory tract infection prevention: a randomized, blinded, controlled clinical trial
publisher BMC
series European Journal of Medical Research
issn 2047-783X
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background In children, up to 30% of viral respiratory tract infections (RTIs) develop into bacterial complications associated with pneumonia, sinusitis or otitis media to trigger a tremendous need for antibiotics. This study investigated the efficacy of Echinacea for the prevention of viral RTIs, for the prevention of secondary bacterial complications and for reducing rates of antibiotic prescriptions in children. Methods Echinaforce® Junior tablets [400 mg freshly harvested Echinacea purpurea alcoholic extract] or vitamin C [50 mg] as control were given three times daily for prevention to children 4–12 years. Two × 2 months of prevention were separated by a 1-week treatment break. Parents assessed respiratory symptoms in children via e-diaries and collected nasopharyngeal secretions for screening of respiratory pathogens (Allplex® RT-PCR). Results Overall, 429 cold days occurred in NITT = 103 children with Echinacea in comparison to 602 days in NITT = 98 children with vitamin C (p < 0.001, Chi-square test). Echinacea prevented 32.5% of RTI episodes resulting in an odds ratio of OR = 0.52 [95% CI 0.30–0.91, p = 0.021]. Six children (5.8%) with Echinacea and 15 children (15.3%) with vitamin C required 6 and 24 courses of antibiotic treatment, respectively (reduction of 76.3%, p < 0.001). A total of 45 and 216 days of antibiotic therapy were reported in the two groups, respectively (reduction of 80.2% (p < 0.001). Eleven and 30 events of RTI complications (e.g., otitis media, sinusitis or pneumonia) occurred with Echinacea and vitamin C, respectively (p = 0.0030). Echinacea significantly prevented influenza (3 vs. 20 detections, p = 0.012) and enveloped virus infections (29 vs. 47 detections, p = 0.0038). Finally, 76 adverse events occurred with Echinacea and 105 events with vitamin C (p = 0.016), only three events were reported possibly related with Echinacea. Conclusions Our results support the use of Echinacea for the prevention of RTIs and reduction of associated antibiotic usage in children. Trial registration clinicaltrials.gov, NCT02971384, 23th Nov 2016.
topic Respiratory tract infections
Prevention
Echinacea
Complications
Antibiotics
Antiviral
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-021-00499-6
work_keys_str_mv AT mercedesogal echinaceareducesantibioticusageinchildrenthroughrespiratorytractinfectionpreventionarandomizedblindedcontrolledclinicaltrial
AT sebastianljohnston echinaceareducesantibioticusageinchildrenthroughrespiratorytractinfectionpreventionarandomizedblindedcontrolledclinicaltrial
AT peterklein echinaceareducesantibioticusageinchildrenthroughrespiratorytractinfectionpreventionarandomizedblindedcontrolledclinicaltrial
AT rolandschoop echinaceareducesantibioticusageinchildrenthroughrespiratorytractinfectionpreventionarandomizedblindedcontrolledclinicaltrial
_version_ 1721530810372194304