The majority of prescriptions for antibiotic ear drops in Australia have been for potentially ototoxic aminoglycoside-containing drops. Six cases of deafness in patients using combination ear drops have been reported to the Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory Committee. The product information states the drops are contraindicated in the presence of tympanic membrane perforations yet they are still used as first-line management of discharging middle ears. In children with chronic suppurative otitis media, particularly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, repeat courses of potentially ototoxic drops have been used for prolonged periods, placing these often audiologically unmonitored children at risk of sensorineural hearing loss. The Therapeutic Guidelines: Antibiotic recommends aural toilet for chronic suppurative otitis media and limits any aminoglycoside drops to seven days of treatment. If there is no response after seven days a topical fluoroquinolone is recommended.
A study by the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation compared fluoroquinolone ear drops with a combination of framycetin, gramicidin and dexamethasone. In 111 children with ears infected by the usual organisms isolated in chronic suppurative otitis media (Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus), the efficacy of ciprofloxacin was significantly greater.7
There was a clinical cure in 42 of the 55 children given ciprofloxacin, compared with 29 of the 56 children given the combination.
The recommended duration of ciprofloxacin therapy is nine days, and safety and efficacy are unknown beyond 14 days. There is concern about bacterial resistance to the fluoroquinolones, but no controlled studies with pre- and post-treatment minimum inhibitory concentration/sensitivity testing have detected fluoroquinolone resistance in the absence of previous systemic fluoroquinolone treatment. The local high concentration of topical drops ensures that they are bactericidal to bacteria in the middle ear and mastoid, although a bacterial biofilm may persist.
Ciprofloxacin drops as an ear preparation have been approved by the Therapeutic Goods Administration, and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme subsidises them for use in chronic suppurative otitis media in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander patients over the age of one month. A private prescription is necessary for other patients.