Female Asthmatic Patients Have Higher Risk to Develop Gemifloxacin-Associated Skin Rash, Highlighting Unique Delayed Onset Characteristics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
3. Discussion
4. Methods
4.1. Study Population
4.2. Study Outcomes and Covariates
4.3. Ethical Consideration
4.4. Statistical Analyses
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Non-Skin Rash Group (n = 1322) | Skin Rash Group (n = 36) | Crude Odds Ratio(OR) (95% Confidence Interval (CI)) | p Value | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n | (%) | n | (%) | |||
Age, years | ||||||
<40 | 232 | (97.1) | 7 | (2.9) | Ref. | |
≧40 | 1090 | (97.4) | 29 | (2.6) | 0.88 (0.38–2.04) | 0.768 |
Gender | ||||||
Male | 699 | (98.3) | 12 | (2.6) | Ref. | |
Female | 623 | (96.3) | 24 | (3.7) | 2.24 (1.11–4.53) | 0.021 * |
Co-morbidities | ||||||
Asthma | ||||||
No | 1062 | (97.8) | 24 | (2.2) | Ref. | |
Yes | 260 | (95.6) | 12 | (4.4) | 2.04 (1.01–4.14) | 0.043 * |
Allergic rhinitis | ||||||
No | 1025 | (97.6) | 25 | (2.4) | Ref. | |
Yes | 297 | (96.4) | 11 | (3.6) | 1.52 (0.74–3.12) | 0.253 |
Drugs allergy NSAID allergy | ||||||
No | 1287 | (97.4) | 34 | (2.6) | Ref. | |
Yes | 35 | (94.6) | 2 | (5.4) | 2.16 (0.50–9.36) | 0.302 |
Allergy to other antibiotics | ||||||
No | 1262 | (97.2) | 36 | (2.8) | NA | ---- |
Yes | 60 | (100) | 0 | (0.0) | ||
Allergy to other drugs | ||||||
No | 1249 | (97.4) | 33 | (2.6) | Ref. | |
Yes | 73 | (96.1) | 3 | (3.9) | 1.56 (0.47–5.19) | 0.473 |
Gemifloxacin treatment, days | ||||||
≦7 | 1214 | (97.5) | 30 | (2.5) | Ref. | |
>7 | 108 | (94.7) | 6 | (5.3) | 2.25 (0.92–5.52) | 0.077 |
Gender | Asthma | Patients without Skin Rash | Patients with Skin Rash | aOR | (95% CI) | p Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Male | Asthma (−) | 568 (98.3%) | 10 (1.7%) | Ref. | ||
Male | Asthma (+) | 131(98.5%) | 2 (1.5%) | 0.87 | (0.19–4.04) | 0.863 |
Female | Asthma (−) | 494(97.2%) | 14 (2.8%) | 1.60 | (0.71–3.74) | 0.261 |
Female | Asthma (+) | 129(92.8%) | 10 (7.2%) | 4.45 | (1.81–10.93) | 0.001 |
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Wu, C.-M.; Wei, P.-J.; Shen, Y.-T.; Chang, H.-L.; Tsai, Y.-M.; Pan, H.-F.; Chang, Y.-C.; Wei, Y.-C.; Yang, C.-J. Female Asthmatic Patients Have Higher Risk to Develop Gemifloxacin-Associated Skin Rash, Highlighting Unique Delayed Onset Characteristics. Antibiotics 2019, 8, 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics8030134
Wu C-M, Wei P-J, Shen Y-T, Chang H-L, Tsai Y-M, Pan H-F, Chang Y-C, Wei Y-C, Yang C-J. Female Asthmatic Patients Have Higher Risk to Develop Gemifloxacin-Associated Skin Rash, Highlighting Unique Delayed Onset Characteristics. Antibiotics. 2019; 8(3):134. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics8030134
Chicago/Turabian StyleWu, Chiou-Mei, Po-Ju Wei, Yu-Ting Shen, Hsu-Liang Chang, Ying-Ming Tsai, Hung-Fang Pan, Yong-Chieh Chang, Yu-Ching Wei, and Chih-Jen Yang. 2019. "Female Asthmatic Patients Have Higher Risk to Develop Gemifloxacin-Associated Skin Rash, Highlighting Unique Delayed Onset Characteristics" Antibiotics 8, no. 3: 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics8030134
APA StyleWu, C. -M., Wei, P. -J., Shen, Y. -T., Chang, H. -L., Tsai, Y. -M., Pan, H. -F., Chang, Y. -C., Wei, Y. -C., & Yang, C. -J. (2019). Female Asthmatic Patients Have Higher Risk to Develop Gemifloxacin-Associated Skin Rash, Highlighting Unique Delayed Onset Characteristics. Antibiotics, 8(3), 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics8030134