Αρχειοθήκη ιστολογίου

Τετάρτη 2 Ιανουαρίου 2019

Influenza : Antiviral Chemoprophylaxis

 in Community Settings

X. Who should be considered for antiviral chemoprophylaxis to prevent influenza in the absence of exposure or an institutional outbreak (preexposure chemoprophylaxis)?

Antiviral drugs should not be used for routine or widespread chemoprophylaxis outside of institutional outbreaks; antiviral chemoprophylaxis can be considered in certain situations:

  1. Clinicians can consider antiviral chemoprophylaxis for the duration of the influenza season for adults and children aged ≥3 months who are at very high risk of developing complications from influenza and for whom influenza vaccination is contraindicated, unavailable, or expected to have low effectiveness (eg, persons who are severely immunocompromised) (C-II).
  2. Clinicians can consider antiviral chemoprophylaxis for the duration of the influenza season for adults and children aged ≥3 months who have the highest risk of influenza-associated complications, such as recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplant in the first 6–12 months posttransplant and lung transplant recipients (B-II).
  3. Clinicians can consider short-term antiviral chemoprophylaxis in conjunction with prompt administration of inactivated influenza vaccine for unvaccinated adults and children aged ≥3 months who are at high risk of developing complications from influenza in whom influenza vaccination is expected to be effective (but not yet administered) when influenza activity has been detected in the community (C-II).
  4. Clinicians can consider short-term antiviral chemoprophylaxis for unvaccinated adults, including healthcare personnel, and for children aged ≥3 months who are in close contact with persons at high risk of developing influenza complications during periods of influenza activity when influenza vaccination is contraindicated or unavailable and these high-risk persons are unable to take antiviral chemoprophylaxis (C-III).
  5. Clinicians can consider educating patients and parents of patients to arrange for early empiric initiation of antiviral treatment as an alternative to antiviral chemoprophylaxis (C-III).

XI. Which antiviral drugs should be used for preexposure chemoprophylaxis for influenza?

  1. Clinicians should use an NAI (oral oseltamivir or inhaled zanamivir) if preexposure chemoprophylaxis for influenza is administered rather than an adamantane antiviral (A-II).

XII. What is the duration of preexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis to prevent influenza?

  1. Clinicians should administer preexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis for adults and children aged ≥3 months who are at very high risk of developing complications from influenza (eg, severely immunocompromised persons such as hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients) for whom influenza vaccination is contraindicated, unavailable, or expected to have low effectiveness, as soon as influenza activity is detected in the community and continued for the duration of community influenza activity (A-II).
  2. Clinicians should test for influenza and switch to antiviral treatment dosing in persons receiving preexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis who become symptomatic, preferably with an antiviral drug with a different resistance profile if not contraindicated (A-II).

XIII. Which asymptomatic persons exposed to influenza should be considered for postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis in a noninstitutional setting?

  1. Clinicians can consider postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis for asymptomatic adults and children aged ≥3 months who are at very high risk of developing complications from influenza (eg, severely immunocompromised persons) and for whom influenza vaccination is contraindicated, unavailable, or expected to have low effectiveness, after household exposure to influenza (C-II).
  2. Clinicians can consider postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis (in conjunction with influenza vaccination) for adults and children aged ≥3 months who are unvaccinated and are household contacts of a person at very high risk of complications from influenza (eg, severely immunocompromised persons), after exposure to influenza (C-II).
  3. Clinicians can consider educating patients and arranging for early empiric initiation of antiviral treatment as an alternative to postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis (C-III).

XIV. When should postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis be started?

  1. If chemoprophylaxis is given, clinicians should administer postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis as soon as possible after exposure, ideally no later than 48 hours after exposure (A-III).
  2. Clinicians should not administer once-daily postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis if >48 hours has elapsed since exposure. Full-dose empiric antiviral treatment should be initiated as soon as symptoms occur, if treatment is indicated (A-III).

XV. How long should postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis be given?

  1. Clinicians should administer postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis in a nonoutbreak setting for 7 days after the most recent exposure to a close contact with influenza (A-III).
  2. Clinicians should test for influenza and switch to antiviral treatment dosing in persons receiving postexposure antiviral chemoprophylaxis who become symptomatic, preferably with an antiviral drug with a different resistance profile if not contraindicated (A-III).

XVI. Which antiviral drugs should be used for postexposure chemoprophylaxis?

  1. Clinicians should administer an NAI (inhaled zanamivir or oral oseltamivir) if postexposure chemoprophylaxis for influenza is given, rather than an adamantane antiviral (A-II).

https://www.idsociety.org/practice-guideline/influenza/

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