The Use of Oral Fluoroquinolones in Nursing Home Patients

Abstract
The approach to management of patients with presumed infection in the nursing home is influenced by the limited availability of diagnostic tests and support staff. Although antibiotics are most often prescribed in the absence of laboratory data, many studies indicate that empirical therapy for nursing home infections is relatively successful. With the scrutiny on containment of healthcare costs, therapy of nursing home patients has been changing and will continue to shift toward treatment within nursing homes without transfer to a hospital. Better oral antimicrobial agents with a wide spectrum of activity, such as the fluoroquinolones, will play a major role in the treatment of many infections acquired in the nursing home. Because of the favourable characteristics of the fluoroquinolone agents, they should be useful for elderly patients who develop infections in nursing homes. They have excellent in vitro activity against Gram-negative bacteria which are often multidrug-resistant and are common in nursing home patients. Studies indicate that absorption of orally administered fluoroquinolones is very efficient in the elderly and these drugs are well tolerated. Numerous clinical trials have documented good efficacy of the fluoroquinolones in the treatment of elderly patients for the most common infections in the nursing home, including urinary tract infections, respiratory tract infections and skin infections.