A 20-year-old college basketball player presents to the emergency department with a 2-day history of a red, painful area on his right buttock. He reports that there was no specific trauma to this area but that he had participated in several basketball games over the past several weeks at various schools throughout the United States. He believes he may have had a low-grade fever the night before but did not take his temperature. He has no chronic medical conditions and is taking no medications. He did receive amoxicillin for 1 week within the past year for a sinus infection but otherwise has not received any antimicrobial therapy. He has no known allergies to medication. A physical examination was notable for an oral temperature of 37.7°C, a pulse of 78 beats per minute, a blood pressure of 110/70 mm Hg, respirations of 12 per minute, and an erythematous, warm, tender, 5-by-3-cm area on the right buttock, with a firm, tender central area approximately 2 cm in diameter and without drainage. He does not like to take medications, but he is concerned that he will not be at full strength for his next basketball game in 1 week's time.
Treatment Options
What kind of treatment would you find most appropriate for this patient? Three options are outlined and each is defended in a short essay by an expert in the management of infectious diseases; read the essays and then cast your vote.
- Treatment Option 1
- Treatment Option 2
- Treatment Option 3
Incision and Drainage Alone
Henry F. Chambers, M.D.
This is a case of an uncomplicated cutaneous abscess, probably due to infection with Staphylococcus aureus, in a college athlete. On physical examination, the center of the lesion is indurated, not fluctuant, maybe because the abscess is not fully mature or because overlying inflammation and tissue edema are obscuring a deeper abscess. The absence of purulent drainage, which if present would favor the diagnosis of abscess, is not helpful in ruling out the diagnosis. Needle aspiration or ultrasonography is useful in locating the collection of pus not evident on inspection or palpation. Surrounding cellulitis is common, and given the focal nature of this lesion, it can be effectively treated with incision and drainage alone. Prescribing a course of antimicrobial therapy, although a common practice, is unnecessary and may be associated with side effects, either in direct relation to the use of the medication or through facilitation of resistant organisms. Antibiotics have not been shown to improve outcomes in patients with uncomplicated abscesses, as compared with incision and drainage alone.
The fact that antibiotics are not necessary in treating uncomplicated staphylococcal skin infections was suggested by the results of a trial published in 1957 comparing intramuscular penicillin with oral penicillin for a variety of skin infections, 80% of which were boils, abscesses, or carbuncles.1 Clinical isolates of S. aureus from 66 of the 239 patients were penicillin-resistant, yet these patients fared just as well as those infected with susceptible strains. The following year, Anderson reported results for 320 patients with S. aureus infections in the hand that were treated with the use of surgical drainage.2 The outcome was the same for those not treated with penicillin and those treated with penicillin. These findings have been confirmed in randomized trials comparing no antibiotic therapy and therapy with cloxacillin,3 clindamycin,4 or cephradine.5
Should the treatment recommendations be different for this athlete if his infection is caused by a community-associated strain of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA)? Although there are no specific risk factors for MRSA in this case, community-associated MRSA strains are widespread and prevalent throughout the United States.6 Regardless of susceptibility, antibiotics are not needed in this healthy man with an uncomplicated first abscess, no coexisting medical conditions, and no systemic signs of infection. According to three observational studies6,7,8 and one randomized trial,9 the outcome for MRSA infection of the skin and soft tissues is independent of whether the antibiotic prescribed is active or not, and outcome of MRSA infections treated with an inactive agent is the same as that for methicillin-susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) infection treated with an active antibiotic. One retrospective study10 suggesting a benefit of antibiotics is not applicable to this particular case. The patient population studied had a high rate of coexisting medical conditions; 34% of patients had health care–associated infections, and 34% were hospitalized.
A randomized, double-blind trial11 comparing placebo to cephalexin in 166 patients undergoing surgical drainage of uncomplicated abscesses provides the strongest evidence yet that antibiotics are not needed. A total of 68% of cultures yielded S. aureus strains, 88% of which were MRSA, and 94% of the MRSA strains were positive for Panton–Valentine leukocidin. In all, 90.5% of placebo recipients had a clinical cure, as compared with 84.1% of cephalexin recipients — an absolute difference of 6.4% (95% confidence interval, –4.2 to 17.0), favoring the placebo.
I anticipate an excellent outcome in our college athlete with the use of incision and drainage alone. I would not want to expose him to potential side effects from the use of antibiotics, although they are uncommon, without a reasonable likelihood of benefit.
Dr. Chambers reports receiving grant support from Cubist and Johnson and Johnson. No other potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
From the Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco.
Cast Your Vote
Given your knowledge of the condition and the points made by the experts, which treatment option would you choose? Base your opinion on the published literature, your past experience, recent guidelines, and other sources of information, as appropriate. Indicate your choice by using the Cast Your Vote button below. You may also submit comments after you vote (maximum of 175 words).
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References
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