
A new survey of pediatricians shows less than half adhere to national recommendations for oseltamivir (Tamiflu) prescribing for children hospitalized with flu, and suggests randomized control trials of the antiviral drug in the pediatric population would help increase uptake.
The study was published late last week in Pediatrics, and is based on survey results from 787 physicians from five specialties working at seven US children's hospitals from March to June 2024.
All US children hospitalized for influenza are recommended, per the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), to receive oseltamivir during their hospital stay, but inpatient use of the drug is inconsistent the authors said.
In the survey, clinicians were presented with four case description of patients and asked how likely they were to prescribe oseltamivir. All four case descriptions would meet the recommendations for oseltamivir use under current guidelines.
Infectious disease doctors most ilk to recommend Tamiflu
Overall, oseltamivir was recommended less than half the time (49.5%). Among clinicians with knowledge of guidelines, 62.0% recommended use, compared with 42.4% of clinicians who did not have accurate knowledge of guidelines.
Clinicians were less likely to prescribe the drug to patients with long illnesses or non-respiratory symptoms. Infectious disease specialists were most likely to recommend oseltamivir, while hospitalists were least likely to.
Most respondents (87.4%) believed a randomized trial of oseltamivir in hospitalized children was moderately to extremely important,
"Most respondents (87.4%) believed a randomized trial of oseltamivir in hospitalized children was moderately to extremely important," the authors concluded. They wrote that hospital length of stay was the most pressing primary outcome to assess.