Cargando…

34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH)

BACKGROUND: In early months of COVID-19 pandemic, SGH recorded a year-on-year increase in antibiotic (ABx) use for community acquired acute respiratory infection (CA ARI) from Feb-Apr 2019 (48.7 defined daily doses (DDD)/100 bed-days) to 2020 (50.8 DDD/100 bed-days). To address concerns of misuse, t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lim, Shena Yun Chun, Zhou, Peijun Yvonne, Yii, Daphne Yah Chieh, Hung, Kai Chee, Lee, Lai Wei, Liew, Yi Xin, Lim, Jia Le, Loo, Li Wen, Koomanan, Narendran, Chua, Nathalie Grace Sy, Cherng, Benjamin Pei Zhi, Thien, Siew Yee, Lee, Winnie, Kwa, Lay Hoon Andrea, Chung, Shimin Jasmine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8690381/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.236
_version_ 1784618643059900416
author Lim, Shena Yun Chun
Zhou, Peijun Yvonne
Yii, Daphne Yah Chieh
Hung, Kai Chee
Lee, Lai Wei
Liew, Yi Xin
Lim, Jia Le
Loo, Li Wen
Koomanan, Narendran
Chua, Nathalie Grace Sy
Cherng, Benjamin Pei Zhi
Thien, Siew Yee
Lee, Winnie
Kwa, Lay Hoon Andrea
Chung, Shimin Jasmine
author_facet Lim, Shena Yun Chun
Zhou, Peijun Yvonne
Yii, Daphne Yah Chieh
Hung, Kai Chee
Lee, Lai Wei
Liew, Yi Xin
Lim, Jia Le
Loo, Li Wen
Koomanan, Narendran
Chua, Nathalie Grace Sy
Cherng, Benjamin Pei Zhi
Thien, Siew Yee
Lee, Winnie
Kwa, Lay Hoon Andrea
Chung, Shimin Jasmine
author_sort Lim, Shena Yun Chun
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In early months of COVID-19 pandemic, SGH recorded a year-on-year increase in antibiotic (ABx) use for community acquired acute respiratory infection (CA ARI) from Feb-Apr 2019 (48.7 defined daily doses (DDD)/100 bed-days) to 2020 (50.8 DDD/100 bed-days). To address concerns of misuse, the antibiotic stewardship unit (ASU) expanded prospective audit feedback (PAF) to CA ARI patients admitted to ARI wards, with low procalcitonin (PCT). PAF was conducted on day 2-3 of ABx, on weekdays. Doctors received feedback to stop/modify when ABx was deemed inappropriate. Here, we describe the impact of ASU’s adaptive approach to curb rising ABx use in patients admitted for ARI during COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: A Pre- & Post-intervention study was conducted. All patients started on ABx (ceftriaxone/co-amoxiclav/piptazo/carbapenems/levofloxacin) for CA ARI & PCT < 0.5µg/L were analysed. Those who died ≤48h of admission; admitted to intensive care; required ABx escalation; >1 infective sites; complex lung infection were excluded. Primary objective was to compare the proportion of ABx stopped ≤4 days (time to final infection diagnosis) Pre (22/3-18/4/20) & Post (21/4-13/7/20). RESULTS: 184 (Pre) & 528 (Post) ABx courses were analysed. ASU audited 51 (Pre) & 380 (Post) courses with the rest discontinued/discharged before review. Patients were largely similar in both periods; a third had low likelihood of bacterial infection (C reactive protein < 30mg/L). In Post, 73 feedback was given to stop ABx (often because symptoms suggested viral/fluid overload) & 18 to switch to oral ABx. 82 (90%) feedback was accepted. No ABx was restarted ≤48h or deaths ≤30 days due to ARI. 1 patient had C. difficile diarrhoea a day after ABx cessation as per ASU feedback. Proportion of all ABx stopped ≤4 days was higher in Post than Pre [27/184 (15%) vs 152/528 (29%), p< 0.01]. Median duration of therapy of IV ABx was reduced (6.5 vs 3 days, p< 0.01), with corresponding shorter median length of stay (10.5 vs 6 days, p< 0.01). [Image: see text] CONCLUSION: PAF directly and indirectly reduced ABx duration in patients treated for CA ARI as prescribers become more conscious about stopping ABx when investigations show low likelihood of bacterial infection. ASU must remain agile during pandemics to detect emerging problems and adapt processes to counter early. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8690381
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-86903812022-01-05 34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH) Lim, Shena Yun Chun Zhou, Peijun Yvonne Yii, Daphne Yah Chieh Hung, Kai Chee Lee, Lai Wei Liew, Yi Xin Lim, Jia Le Loo, Li Wen Koomanan, Narendran Chua, Nathalie Grace Sy Cherng, Benjamin Pei Zhi Thien, Siew Yee Lee, Winnie Kwa, Lay Hoon Andrea Chung, Shimin Jasmine Open Forum Infect Dis Poster Abstracts BACKGROUND: In early months of COVID-19 pandemic, SGH recorded a year-on-year increase in antibiotic (ABx) use for community acquired acute respiratory infection (CA ARI) from Feb-Apr 2019 (48.7 defined daily doses (DDD)/100 bed-days) to 2020 (50.8 DDD/100 bed-days). To address concerns of misuse, the antibiotic stewardship unit (ASU) expanded prospective audit feedback (PAF) to CA ARI patients admitted to ARI wards, with low procalcitonin (PCT). PAF was conducted on day 2-3 of ABx, on weekdays. Doctors received feedback to stop/modify when ABx was deemed inappropriate. Here, we describe the impact of ASU’s adaptive approach to curb rising ABx use in patients admitted for ARI during COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: A Pre- & Post-intervention study was conducted. All patients started on ABx (ceftriaxone/co-amoxiclav/piptazo/carbapenems/levofloxacin) for CA ARI & PCT < 0.5µg/L were analysed. Those who died ≤48h of admission; admitted to intensive care; required ABx escalation; >1 infective sites; complex lung infection were excluded. Primary objective was to compare the proportion of ABx stopped ≤4 days (time to final infection diagnosis) Pre (22/3-18/4/20) & Post (21/4-13/7/20). RESULTS: 184 (Pre) & 528 (Post) ABx courses were analysed. ASU audited 51 (Pre) & 380 (Post) courses with the rest discontinued/discharged before review. Patients were largely similar in both periods; a third had low likelihood of bacterial infection (C reactive protein < 30mg/L). In Post, 73 feedback was given to stop ABx (often because symptoms suggested viral/fluid overload) & 18 to switch to oral ABx. 82 (90%) feedback was accepted. No ABx was restarted ≤48h or deaths ≤30 days due to ARI. 1 patient had C. difficile diarrhoea a day after ABx cessation as per ASU feedback. Proportion of all ABx stopped ≤4 days was higher in Post than Pre [27/184 (15%) vs 152/528 (29%), p< 0.01]. Median duration of therapy of IV ABx was reduced (6.5 vs 3 days, p< 0.01), with corresponding shorter median length of stay (10.5 vs 6 days, p< 0.01). [Image: see text] CONCLUSION: PAF directly and indirectly reduced ABx duration in patients treated for CA ARI as prescribers become more conscious about stopping ABx when investigations show low likelihood of bacterial infection. ASU must remain agile during pandemics to detect emerging problems and adapt processes to counter early. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures Oxford University Press 2021-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8690381/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.236 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. 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 Poster Abstracts
Lim, Shena Yun Chun
Zhou, Peijun Yvonne
Yii, Daphne Yah Chieh
Hung, Kai Chee
Lee, Lai Wei
Liew, Yi Xin
Lim, Jia Le
Loo, Li Wen
Koomanan, Narendran
Chua, Nathalie Grace Sy
Cherng, Benjamin Pei Zhi
Thien, Siew Yee
Lee, Winnie
Kwa, Lay Hoon Andrea
Chung, Shimin Jasmine
34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH)
title 34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH)
title_full 34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH)
title_fullStr 34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH)
title_full_unstemmed 34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH)
title_short 34. Stemming the Rise in Antibiotic Prescription for Community Acquired Respiratory Infections (ARI) During COVID-19 Pandemic in Singapore General Hospital (SGH)
title_sort 34. stemming the rise in antibiotic prescription for community acquired respiratory infections (ari) during covid-19 pandemic in singapore general hospital (sgh)
topic Poster Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8690381/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.236
work_keys_str_mv AT limshenayunchun 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT zhoupeijunyvonne 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT yiidaphneyahchieh 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT hungkaichee 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT leelaiwei 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT liewyixin 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT limjiale 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT looliwen 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT koomanannarendran 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT chuanathaliegracesy 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT cherngbenjaminpeizhi 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT thiensiewyee 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT leewinnie 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT kwalayhoonandrea 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh
AT chungshiminjasmine 34stemmingtheriseinantibioticprescriptionforcommunityacquiredrespiratoryinfectionsariduringcovid19pandemicinsingaporegeneralhospitalsgh