TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessment of empirical antibiotic therapy optimisation in six hospitals
T2 - An observational cohort study
AU - Braykov, Nikolay P.
AU - Morgan, Daniel J.
AU - Schweizer, Marin L.
AU - Uslan, Daniel Z.
AU - Kelesidis, Theodoros
AU - Weisenberg, Scott A.
AU - Johannsson, Birgir
AU - Young, Heather
AU - Cantey, Joseph
AU - Srinivasan, Arjun
AU - Perencevich, Eli
AU - Septimus, Edward
AU - Laxminarayan, Ramanan
N1 - Funding Information:
The design and conduct of the study, the collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data were funded by grant GS-10F-0163P from the Centers for Disease Control, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion (NPB, DJM, SAW, JC, HY, BJ), Extending the Cure project funded by a Pioneer Portfolio grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (NPB, RL), Science and Technology Directorate, Department of Homeland Security contract HSHQDC-12-C-00058 (RL), VA Health Service Research and Development (HSR&D) grant 11-211 (MLS), VA HSR&D grant 09-099 (EP), AHRQ K08 HS18111 (DJM). The funders had no role in the preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript, and decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Background: Modification of empirical antimicrobials when warranted by culture results or clinical signs is recommended to control antimicrobial overuse and resistance. We aimed to assess the frequency with which patients were started on empirical antimicrobials, characteristics of the empirical regimen and the clinical characteristics of patients at the time of starting antimicrobials, patterns of changes to empirical therapy at different timepoints, and modifiable factors associated with changes to the initial empirical regimen in the first 5 days of therapy. Methods: We did a chart review of adult inpatients receiving one or more antimicrobials in six US hospitals on 4 days during 2009 and 2010. Our primary outcome was the modification of antimicrobial regimen on or before the 5th day of empirical therapy, analysed as a three-category variable. Bivariate analyses were used to establish demographic and clinical variables associated with the outcome. Variables with p values below 0.1 were included in a multivariable generalised linear latent and mixed model with multinomial logit link to adjust for clustering within hospitals and accommodate a non-binary outcome variable. Findings: Across the six study sites, 4119 (60%) of 6812 inpatients received antimicrobials. Of 1200 randomly selected patients with active antimicrobials, 730 (61%) met inclusion criteria. At the start of therapy, 220 (30%) patients were afebrile and had normal white blood cell counts. Appropriate cultures were collected from 432 (59%) patients, and 250 (58%) were negative. By the 5th day of therapy, 12.5% of empirical antimicrobials were escalated, 21.5% were narrowed or discontinued, and 66.4% were unchanged. Narrowing or discontinuation was more likely when cultures were collected at the start of therapy (adjusted OR 1.68, 95% CI 1.05-2.70) and no infection was noted on an initial radiological study (1.76, 1.11-2.79). Escalation was associated with multiple infection sites (2.54, 1.34-4.83) and a positive culture (1.99, 1.20-3.29). Interpretation: Broad-spectrum empirical therapy is common, even when clinical signs of infection are absent. Fewer than one in three inpatients have their regimens narrowed within 5 days of starting empirical antimicrobials. Improved diagnostic methods and continued education are needed to guide discontinuation of antimicrobials. Funding: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; US Department of Veterans Administration; US Department of Homeland Security.
AB - Background: Modification of empirical antimicrobials when warranted by culture results or clinical signs is recommended to control antimicrobial overuse and resistance. We aimed to assess the frequency with which patients were started on empirical antimicrobials, characteristics of the empirical regimen and the clinical characteristics of patients at the time of starting antimicrobials, patterns of changes to empirical therapy at different timepoints, and modifiable factors associated with changes to the initial empirical regimen in the first 5 days of therapy. Methods: We did a chart review of adult inpatients receiving one or more antimicrobials in six US hospitals on 4 days during 2009 and 2010. Our primary outcome was the modification of antimicrobial regimen on or before the 5th day of empirical therapy, analysed as a three-category variable. Bivariate analyses were used to establish demographic and clinical variables associated with the outcome. Variables with p values below 0.1 were included in a multivariable generalised linear latent and mixed model with multinomial logit link to adjust for clustering within hospitals and accommodate a non-binary outcome variable. Findings: Across the six study sites, 4119 (60%) of 6812 inpatients received antimicrobials. Of 1200 randomly selected patients with active antimicrobials, 730 (61%) met inclusion criteria. At the start of therapy, 220 (30%) patients were afebrile and had normal white blood cell counts. Appropriate cultures were collected from 432 (59%) patients, and 250 (58%) were negative. By the 5th day of therapy, 12.5% of empirical antimicrobials were escalated, 21.5% were narrowed or discontinued, and 66.4% were unchanged. Narrowing or discontinuation was more likely when cultures were collected at the start of therapy (adjusted OR 1.68, 95% CI 1.05-2.70) and no infection was noted on an initial radiological study (1.76, 1.11-2.79). Escalation was associated with multiple infection sites (2.54, 1.34-4.83) and a positive culture (1.99, 1.20-3.29). Interpretation: Broad-spectrum empirical therapy is common, even when clinical signs of infection are absent. Fewer than one in three inpatients have their regimens narrowed within 5 days of starting empirical antimicrobials. Improved diagnostic methods and continued education are needed to guide discontinuation of antimicrobials. Funding: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; US Department of Veterans Administration; US Department of Homeland Security.
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U2 - 10.1016/S1473-3099(14)70952-1
DO - 10.1016/S1473-3099(14)70952-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 25455989
AN - SCOPUS:84922599155
VL - 14
SP - 1220
EP - 1227
JO - The Lancet Infectious Diseases
JF - The Lancet Infectious Diseases
SN - 1473-3099
IS - 12
ER -