What is the best treatment for oral thrush in healthy infants?
Fluconazole vs nystatin. In the only prospective RCT (unblinded) to compare oral suspensions of fluconazole and nystatin, 34 infants were randomized to receive either nystatin (1 mL of 100,000 IU/mL) qid for 10 days or fluconazole (3 mg/kg) once a day for 7 days. Mothers of breastfed infants applied nystatin cream to their nipples twice a day for the duration of the infant’s treatment. The clinical cure rate—defined as absence of oral plaques at the end of therapy (day 10 for the nystatin group, day 7 for the fluconazole group)—was significantly higher in the group treated with fluconazole (100% for fluconazole, 32% for nystatin; P<.0001, NNT=2). The eradication rate was also higher with fluconazole (73.3% for fluconazole, 5.6% for nystatin; P<.0001, NNT=2). The patients treated with fluconazole experienced no side effects.4 Fluconazole has been shown to be effective, safe, and easy to use to treat thrush in immunocompromised children,5 but has not been approved by the FDA for use in healthy infants.
Gentian violet is effective, but messy and irritating
A retrospective cohort study that reviewed 69 cases of oral thrush showed that gentian violet achieved a 75% cure rate in an average of 11 days (compared to 55% in 10 days for nystatin). Both treatments shortened the duration of illness compared with the average of 34 days for untreated children.6 However, gentian violet can stain skin and clothes, and case studies have shown an association with ulceration of the buccal mucosa.7
Recommendations
A thorough literature search through the Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, National Guideline Clearinghouse, and Medline did not yield any guidelines or consensus statements from other organizations or specialty groups on treating oropharyngeal candidiasis in infants. Neither the American Academy of Pediatrics nor the Infectious Diseases Society of America has issued applicable practice guidelines.
