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Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017

BACKGROUND: A national assessment of antibiotic appropriateness in intensive care units (ICUs) with benchmarking was performed to assist antibiotic stewardship programs (ASPs) identify improvement opportunities. METHODS: A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tool was adapted by an expert pane...

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Autores principales: Trivedi, Kavita K, Ostrowsky, Belinda, Abbo, Lilian M, Srinivasan, Arjun, Bartash, Rachel, Cassera, Fred, Fleisher, Jorge, Kubiak, David W, Letourneau, Alyssa R, Nori, Priya, Parodi, Stephen, Aragon, Laura, Dollard, Eliza, Gagliardo, Christina, Ghitan, Monica, Giles, Amber, Mayer, Suri, Quevedo, Jennifer, Rieg, Gunter, Shteyman, Galina, Vargas, Jaclyn, Kelley, Shannon, Silver, Phyllis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5631688/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx163.539
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author Trivedi, Kavita K
Ostrowsky, Belinda
Abbo, Lilian M
Srinivasan, Arjun
Bartash, Rachel
Cassera, Fred
Fleisher, Jorge
Kubiak, David W
Letourneau, Alyssa R
Nori, Priya
Parodi, Stephen
Aragon, Laura
Dollard, Eliza
Gagliardo, Christina
Ghitan, Monica
Giles, Amber
Mayer, Suri
Quevedo, Jennifer
Rieg, Gunter
Shteyman, Galina
Vargas, Jaclyn
Kelley, Shannon
Silver, Phyllis
author_facet Trivedi, Kavita K
Ostrowsky, Belinda
Abbo, Lilian M
Srinivasan, Arjun
Bartash, Rachel
Cassera, Fred
Fleisher, Jorge
Kubiak, David W
Letourneau, Alyssa R
Nori, Priya
Parodi, Stephen
Aragon, Laura
Dollard, Eliza
Gagliardo, Christina
Ghitan, Monica
Giles, Amber
Mayer, Suri
Quevedo, Jennifer
Rieg, Gunter
Shteyman, Galina
Vargas, Jaclyn
Kelley, Shannon
Silver, Phyllis
author_sort Trivedi, Kavita K
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A national assessment of antibiotic appropriateness in intensive care units (ICUs) with benchmarking was performed to assist antibiotic stewardship programs (ASPs) identify improvement opportunities. METHODS: A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tool was adapted by an expert panel from the Partnership for Quality Care (PQC), a coalition dedicated to high quality care in US hospitals, to validate appropriate antibiotic use measurement via a point prevalence survey on a single day. Data were collected by ASP personnel at each hospital, de-identified and submitted in aggregate to PQC for benchmarking. Hospitals identified reasons for inappropriate antibiotic use by category and antibiotics misused. RESULTS: Forty-seven ICUs from 12 PQC hospitals participated: California (2), Florida (2), Massachusetts (3), Minnesota (1), and New York (4). Most hospitals identified as teaching (83%) with 252-1550 bed size (median: 563) and 20–270 licensed ICU beds (median: 70). All hospitals reported a formal ASP. On March 1, 2017, 362 (54%) of 667 patients in participating ICUs were on antibiotics (range: 8-81 patients); 1 patient was not assessed. Of the remaining 361 antibiotic regimens, 112 (31%) were identified as inappropriate from among all 12 hospitals (range: 9-82%) (figure). The table displays inappropriate antibiotic use by ICU type. Reasons for inappropriate use included unnecessarily broad spectrum of activity (29%), duration longer than necessary (21%), and treatment of a non-infectious syndrome (19%). The antibiotic most commonly misused was vancomycin in 7 (58%) hospitals. CONCLUSION: Up to 80% of antibiotic use in some ICUs is inappropriate, underscoring the need for ASP interventions, standardized assessment tools and benchmarking. Strategies should focus on de-escalation of broad-spectrum antibiotics and reducing duration of therapy. DISCLOSURES: D. W. Kubiak, Shionogi: Consultant, Consulting fee. Astellas Pharma: Consultant, Consulting fee
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spelling pubmed-56316882017-11-07 Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017 Trivedi, Kavita K Ostrowsky, Belinda Abbo, Lilian M Srinivasan, Arjun Bartash, Rachel Cassera, Fred Fleisher, Jorge Kubiak, David W Letourneau, Alyssa R Nori, Priya Parodi, Stephen Aragon, Laura Dollard, Eliza Gagliardo, Christina Ghitan, Monica Giles, Amber Mayer, Suri Quevedo, Jennifer Rieg, Gunter Shteyman, Galina Vargas, Jaclyn Kelley, Shannon Silver, Phyllis Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: A national assessment of antibiotic appropriateness in intensive care units (ICUs) with benchmarking was performed to assist antibiotic stewardship programs (ASPs) identify improvement opportunities. METHODS: A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tool was adapted by an expert panel from the Partnership for Quality Care (PQC), a coalition dedicated to high quality care in US hospitals, to validate appropriate antibiotic use measurement via a point prevalence survey on a single day. Data were collected by ASP personnel at each hospital, de-identified and submitted in aggregate to PQC for benchmarking. Hospitals identified reasons for inappropriate antibiotic use by category and antibiotics misused. RESULTS: Forty-seven ICUs from 12 PQC hospitals participated: California (2), Florida (2), Massachusetts (3), Minnesota (1), and New York (4). Most hospitals identified as teaching (83%) with 252-1550 bed size (median: 563) and 20–270 licensed ICU beds (median: 70). All hospitals reported a formal ASP. On March 1, 2017, 362 (54%) of 667 patients in participating ICUs were on antibiotics (range: 8-81 patients); 1 patient was not assessed. Of the remaining 361 antibiotic regimens, 112 (31%) were identified as inappropriate from among all 12 hospitals (range: 9-82%) (figure). The table displays inappropriate antibiotic use by ICU type. Reasons for inappropriate use included unnecessarily broad spectrum of activity (29%), duration longer than necessary (21%), and treatment of a non-infectious syndrome (19%). The antibiotic most commonly misused was vancomycin in 7 (58%) hospitals. CONCLUSION: Up to 80% of antibiotic use in some ICUs is inappropriate, underscoring the need for ASP interventions, standardized assessment tools and benchmarking. Strategies should focus on de-escalation of broad-spectrum antibiotics and reducing duration of therapy. DISCLOSURES: D. W. Kubiak, Shionogi: Consultant, Consulting fee. Astellas Pharma: Consultant, Consulting fee Oxford University Press 2017-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5631688/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx163.539 Text en © The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Trivedi, Kavita K
Ostrowsky, Belinda
Abbo, Lilian M
Srinivasan, Arjun
Bartash, Rachel
Cassera, Fred
Fleisher, Jorge
Kubiak, David W
Letourneau, Alyssa R
Nori, Priya
Parodi, Stephen
Aragon, Laura
Dollard, Eliza
Gagliardo, Christina
Ghitan, Monica
Giles, Amber
Mayer, Suri
Quevedo, Jennifer
Rieg, Gunter
Shteyman, Galina
Vargas, Jaclyn
Kelley, Shannon
Silver, Phyllis
Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017
title Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017
title_full Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017
title_fullStr Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017
title_full_unstemmed Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017
title_short Working Together to Define Antibiotic Appropriateness: Point Prevalence Survey in 47 Intensive Care Units from 12 US Hospitals, Partnership for Quality Care, March 2017
title_sort working together to define antibiotic appropriateness: point prevalence survey in 47 intensive care units from 12 us hospitals, partnership for quality care, march 2017
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5631688/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx163.539
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