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Feasibility study of hospital antimicrobial stewardship analytics using electronic health records

BACKGROUND: Hospital antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) programmes are multidisciplinary initiatives to optimize antimicrobial use. Most hospitals depend on time-consuming manual audits to monitor clinicians’ prescribing. But much of the information needed could be sourced from electronic health record...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dutey-Magni, P F, Gill, M J, McNulty, D, Sohal, G, Hayward, A, Shallcross, L, Anderson, Niall, Crayton, Elise, Forbes, Gillian, Jhass, Arnoupe, Richardson, Emma, Richardson, Michelle, Rockenschaub, Patrick, Smith, Catherine, Sutton, Elizabeth, Traina, Rosanna, Atkins, Lou, Conolly, Anne, Denaxas, Spiros, Fragaszy, Ellen, Horne, Rob, Kostkova, Patty, Lorencatto, Fabiana, Michie, Susan, Mindell, Jennifer, Robson, John, Royston, Claire, Tarrant, Carolyn, Thomas, James, West, Jonathan, Williams, Haydn, Elsay, Nadia, Fuller, Chris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8210026/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34223095
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jacamr/dlab018
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Hospital antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) programmes are multidisciplinary initiatives to optimize antimicrobial use. Most hospitals depend on time-consuming manual audits to monitor clinicians’ prescribing. But much of the information needed could be sourced from electronic health records (EHRs). OBJECTIVES: To develop an informatics methodology to analyse characteristics of hospital AMS practice using routine electronic prescribing and laboratory records. METHODS: Feasibility study using electronic prescribing, laboratory and clinical coding records from adult patients admitted to six specialities at Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK (September 2017–August 2018). The study involved: (i) a review of AMS standards of care; (ii) their translation into concepts measurable from commonly available EHRs; and (iii) a pilot application in an EHR cohort study (n = 61679 admissions). RESULTS: We developed data modelling methods to characterize antimicrobial use (antimicrobial therapy episode linkage methods, therapy table, therapy changes). Prescriptions were linked into antimicrobial therapy episodes (mean 2.4 prescriptions/episode; mean length of therapy 5.8 days), enabling several actionable findings. For example, 22% of therapy episodes for low-severity community-acquired pneumonia were congruent with prescribing guidelines, with a tendency to use broader-spectrum antibiotics. Analysis of therapy changes revealed IV to oral therapy switching was delayed by an average 3.6 days (95% CI: 3.4–3.7). Microbial cultures were performed prior to treatment initiation in just 22% of antibacterial prescriptions. The proposed methods enabled fine-grained monitoring of AMS practice down to specialities, wards and individual clinical teams by case mix, enabling more meaningful peer comparison. CONCLUSIONS: It is feasible to use hospital EHRs to construct rapid, meaningful measures of prescribing quality with potential to support quality improvement interventions (audit/feedback to prescribers), engagement with front-line clinicians on optimizing prescribing, and AMS impact evaluation studies.