Cargando…

P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department

BACKGROUND: UKHSA urinary tract infection (UTI) diagnostic guidance uses presence/absence of specific symptoms/signs to guide decisions on urine culture and antibiotic treatment.(1) The goal is treatment of those with highest risk of infection, avoiding serious illness, whilst limiting antibiotic ov...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Slatter, Mandy, Hay, Alastair, Jones, Matthew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10395441/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jacamr/dlad077.013
_version_ 1785083577335021568
author Slatter, Mandy
Hay, Alastair
Jones, Matthew
author_facet Slatter, Mandy
Hay, Alastair
Jones, Matthew
author_sort Slatter, Mandy
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: UKHSA urinary tract infection (UTI) diagnostic guidance uses presence/absence of specific symptoms/signs to guide decisions on urine culture and antibiotic treatment.(1) The goal is treatment of those with highest risk of infection, avoiding serious illness, whilst limiting antibiotic overuse. UK improvement initiatives(2,3) encourage hospitals to align with UKHSA guidance. UTI is a common infection in the emergency department (ED) and diagnosis can be challenging in the elderly.(4,5) OBJECTIVES: To explore retrospective chart review to quantify UTI treatment alignment with UKHSA UTI guidance.(1) Identify ED patients aged 65 years+ (65+) with primary diagnosis of UTI. Limit to non-admitted for manageable sample. Complete retrospective chart review to elicit documented UTI symptoms/signs and associated: (i) urine dipstick testing; (ii) urine sampling for microscopy, culture and susceptibility (MC&S); and (iii) antibiotic treatment. Assess alignment with relevant UKHSA guidance. Estimate time taken. METHODS: Electronic patient record search for key terms (Table 1) identified 6076 ED attendances 65+ between 1 August and 31 October 2021. Forty patients met inclusion criteria. Paramedic/ED notes were reviewed, and information gathered regarding presence/absence of: UTI symptoms/signs as per UKHSA guidelines;(1) urine dipstick test; urine for MC&S; and UTI antibiotic treatment. Findings were mapped to illustrate if UKHSA diagnostic pathway and intended antibiotic prescribing decisions followed. [Table: see text] RESULTS: Twenty-seven of 40 patients matched UKHSA criteria for lower UTI/pyelonephritis. Three of 27 followed recommended pathway of: no dipstick; urine for MC&S; and antibiotic. Twenty of 27 had urine dipstick test (not recommended); 16/27 had urine sample for MC&S (recommended); 26/27 received an antibiotic (recommended). Twenty-three who received antibiotics had dipstick testing, no urine for MC&S or both. One patient did not receive indicated antibiotic treatment. Documented symptoms/signs did not indicate UTI/pyelonephritis in 13/40 patients. Two of 13 followed the recommended pathway of: no dipstick; no urine for MC&S; and no antibiotic. Seven of 13 received a dipstick test; 6/13 had urine for MC&S; 9/13 received antibiotics which were not indicated. Five of 40 followed the recommended pathway; 30/40 received the recommended treatment. The time cost was around 30 min/patient. CONCLUSIONS: UKHSA guideline alignment was low. Testing in asymptomatic patients appeared to result in unnecessary antibiotic use. Retrospective chart review generated detailed data to assess alignment, however results may represent poor documentation not poor alignment. Retrospective chart review time cost too high for large numbers and assumes accurate documentation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10395441
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103954412023-08-03 P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department Slatter, Mandy Hay, Alastair Jones, Matthew JAC Antimicrob Resist Abstracts BACKGROUND: UKHSA urinary tract infection (UTI) diagnostic guidance uses presence/absence of specific symptoms/signs to guide decisions on urine culture and antibiotic treatment.(1) The goal is treatment of those with highest risk of infection, avoiding serious illness, whilst limiting antibiotic overuse. UK improvement initiatives(2,3) encourage hospitals to align with UKHSA guidance. UTI is a common infection in the emergency department (ED) and diagnosis can be challenging in the elderly.(4,5) OBJECTIVES: To explore retrospective chart review to quantify UTI treatment alignment with UKHSA UTI guidance.(1) Identify ED patients aged 65 years+ (65+) with primary diagnosis of UTI. Limit to non-admitted for manageable sample. Complete retrospective chart review to elicit documented UTI symptoms/signs and associated: (i) urine dipstick testing; (ii) urine sampling for microscopy, culture and susceptibility (MC&S); and (iii) antibiotic treatment. Assess alignment with relevant UKHSA guidance. Estimate time taken. METHODS: Electronic patient record search for key terms (Table 1) identified 6076 ED attendances 65+ between 1 August and 31 October 2021. Forty patients met inclusion criteria. Paramedic/ED notes were reviewed, and information gathered regarding presence/absence of: UTI symptoms/signs as per UKHSA guidelines;(1) urine dipstick test; urine for MC&S; and UTI antibiotic treatment. Findings were mapped to illustrate if UKHSA diagnostic pathway and intended antibiotic prescribing decisions followed. [Table: see text] RESULTS: Twenty-seven of 40 patients matched UKHSA criteria for lower UTI/pyelonephritis. Three of 27 followed recommended pathway of: no dipstick; urine for MC&S; and antibiotic. Twenty of 27 had urine dipstick test (not recommended); 16/27 had urine sample for MC&S (recommended); 26/27 received an antibiotic (recommended). Twenty-three who received antibiotics had dipstick testing, no urine for MC&S or both. One patient did not receive indicated antibiotic treatment. Documented symptoms/signs did not indicate UTI/pyelonephritis in 13/40 patients. Two of 13 followed the recommended pathway of: no dipstick; no urine for MC&S; and no antibiotic. Seven of 13 received a dipstick test; 6/13 had urine for MC&S; 9/13 received antibiotics which were not indicated. Five of 40 followed the recommended pathway; 30/40 received the recommended treatment. The time cost was around 30 min/patient. CONCLUSIONS: UKHSA guideline alignment was low. Testing in asymptomatic patients appeared to result in unnecessary antibiotic use. Retrospective chart review generated detailed data to assess alignment, however results may represent poor documentation not poor alignment. Retrospective chart review time cost too high for large numbers and assumes accurate documentation. Oxford University Press 2023-08-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10395441/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jacamr/dlad077.013 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Slatter, Mandy
Hay, Alastair
Jones, Matthew
P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department
title P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department
title_full P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department
title_fullStr P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department
title_full_unstemmed P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department
title_short P09 Feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with UKHSA diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department
title_sort p09 feasibility of retrospective chart review to assess alignment of urinary tract infection diagnosis, testing and treatment decisions with ukhsa diagnostic guidance in patients 65 years+ in the emergency department
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10395441/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jacamr/dlad077.013
work_keys_str_mv AT slattermandy p09feasibilityofretrospectivechartreviewtoassessalignmentofurinarytractinfectiondiagnosistestingandtreatmentdecisionswithukhsadiagnosticguidanceinpatients65yearsintheemergencydepartment
AT hayalastair p09feasibilityofretrospectivechartreviewtoassessalignmentofurinarytractinfectiondiagnosistestingandtreatmentdecisionswithukhsadiagnosticguidanceinpatients65yearsintheemergencydepartment
AT jonesmatthew p09feasibilityofretrospectivechartreviewtoassessalignmentofurinarytractinfectiondiagnosistestingandtreatmentdecisionswithukhsadiagnosticguidanceinpatients65yearsintheemergencydepartment