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Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care

A direct relation between antibiotic use and resistance has been shown at country level. We aim to investigate the association between antibiotic prescribing for patients from individual Dutch primary care practices and antibiotic resistance of bacterial isolates from routinely submitted urine sampl...

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Autores principales: Batenburg, Dylan, Verheij, Theo, van’t Veen, Annemarie, van der Velden, Alike
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7460110/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32752214
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9080470
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author Batenburg, Dylan
Verheij, Theo
van’t Veen, Annemarie
van der Velden, Alike
author_facet Batenburg, Dylan
Verheij, Theo
van’t Veen, Annemarie
van der Velden, Alike
author_sort Batenburg, Dylan
collection PubMed
description A direct relation between antibiotic use and resistance has been shown at country level. We aim to investigate the association between antibiotic prescribing for patients from individual Dutch primary care practices and antibiotic resistance of bacterial isolates from routinely submitted urine samples from their patient populations. Practices’ antibiotic prescribing data were obtained from the Julius Network and related to numbers of registered patients. Practices were classified as low-, middle- or high-prescribers and from each group size-matching practices were chosen. Culture and susceptibility data from submitted urine samples were obtained from the microbiology laboratory. Percentages of resistant isolates, and resistant isolates per 1000 registered patients per year (population resistance) were calculated and compared between the groups. The percentages of resistant Escherichia coli varied considerably between individual practices, but the three prescribing groups’ means were very similar. However, as the higher-prescribing practices requested more urine cultures per 1000 registered patients, population resistance was markedly higher in the higher-prescribing groups. This study showed that the highly variable resistance percentages for individual practices were unrelated to antibiotic prescribing levels. However, population resistance (resistant strains per practice population) was related to antibiotic prescribing levels, which was shown to coincide with numbers of urine culture requests. Whether more urine culture requests in the higher-prescribing groups were related to treatment failures, more complex patient populations, or to general practitioners’ testing behaviour needs further investigation.
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spelling pubmed-74601102020-09-02 Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care Batenburg, Dylan Verheij, Theo van’t Veen, Annemarie van der Velden, Alike Antibiotics (Basel) Article A direct relation between antibiotic use and resistance has been shown at country level. We aim to investigate the association between antibiotic prescribing for patients from individual Dutch primary care practices and antibiotic resistance of bacterial isolates from routinely submitted urine samples from their patient populations. Practices’ antibiotic prescribing data were obtained from the Julius Network and related to numbers of registered patients. Practices were classified as low-, middle- or high-prescribers and from each group size-matching practices were chosen. Culture and susceptibility data from submitted urine samples were obtained from the microbiology laboratory. Percentages of resistant isolates, and resistant isolates per 1000 registered patients per year (population resistance) were calculated and compared between the groups. The percentages of resistant Escherichia coli varied considerably between individual practices, but the three prescribing groups’ means were very similar. However, as the higher-prescribing practices requested more urine cultures per 1000 registered patients, population resistance was markedly higher in the higher-prescribing groups. This study showed that the highly variable resistance percentages for individual practices were unrelated to antibiotic prescribing levels. However, population resistance (resistant strains per practice population) was related to antibiotic prescribing levels, which was shown to coincide with numbers of urine culture requests. Whether more urine culture requests in the higher-prescribing groups were related to treatment failures, more complex patient populations, or to general practitioners’ testing behaviour needs further investigation. MDPI 2020-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7460110/ /pubmed/32752214 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9080470 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Batenburg, Dylan
Verheij, Theo
van’t Veen, Annemarie
van der Velden, Alike
Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care
title Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care
title_full Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care
title_fullStr Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care
title_full_unstemmed Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care
title_short Practice-Level Association between Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance: An Observational Study in Primary Care
title_sort practice-level association between antibiotic prescribing and resistance: an observational study in primary care
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7460110/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32752214
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9080470
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