Literature DB >> 18461676

Impact of aminoglycoside cycling in six tertiary intensive care units: prospective longitudinal interventional study.

Igor Francetić1, Smilja Kalenić, Mirjana Huić, Iveta Mercep, Ksenija Makar-Ausperger, Robert Likić, Viktorija Erdeljić, Vesna Tripković, Petra Simić.   

Abstract

AIM: To determine the effect of aminoglycoside cycling in six tertiary intensive care units (ICU) on the rates of sepsis, aminoglycoside resistance patterns, antibiotic consumption, and costs.
METHODS: This was a prospective longitudinal interventional study that measured the effect of change from first-line gentamicin usage (February 2002-February 2003) to amikacin usage (February 2003-February 2004) on the aminoglycoside resistance patterns, number of patients with gram-negative bacteremia, consumption of antibiotics, and the cost of antimicrobial drugs in 6 tertiary care ICUs in Zagreb, Croatia.
RESULTS: The change from first-line gentamicin to amikacin usage led to a decrease in the overall gentamicin resistance of gram-negative bacteria (GNB) from 42% to 26% (P<0.001; z-test of proportions) and netilmicin resistance from 33% to 20% (P<0.001), but amikacin resistance did not change significantly (P=0.462), except for Acinetobacter baumanni (P=0.014). Sepsis rate in ICUs was reduced from 3.6% to 2.2% (P<0.001; chi(2) test), with a decline in the number of nosocomial bloodstream infections from 55/100 patient-days to 26/100 patient-days (P=0.001, chi(2) test). Furthermore, amikacin use led to a 16% decrease in the overall antibiotic consumption and 0.1 euro/patient/d cost reduction.
CONCLUSION: Exclusive use of amikacin significantly reduced the resistance of GNB isolates to gentamicin and netilmicin, the number of GNB nosocomial bacteremias, and the cost of total antibiotic usage in ICUs.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18461676      PMCID: PMC2359892          DOI: 10.3325/cmj.2008.2.207

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Croat Med J        ISSN: 0353-9504            Impact factor:   1.351


  26 in total

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  3 in total

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Authors:  K de With; F Allerberger; S Amann; P Apfalter; H-R Brodt; T Eckmanns; M Fellhauer; H K Geiss; O Janata; R Krause; S Lemmen; E Meyer; H Mittermayer; U Porsche; E Presterl; S Reuter; B Sinha; R Strauß; A Wechsler-Fördös; C Wenisch; W V Kern
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2.  Resource competition may lead to effective treatment of antibiotic resistant infections.

Authors:  Antonio L C Gomes; James E Galagan; Daniel Segrè
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3.  Cycling empirical antibiotic therapy in hospitals: meta-analysis and models.

Authors:  Pia Abel zur Wiesch; Roger Kouyos; Sören Abel; Wolfgang Viechtbauer; Sebastian Bonhoeffer
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  3 in total

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