| Literature DB >> 27538503 |
Nicola Principi1, Susanna Esposito2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibiotics are among the drugs most commonly prescribed to children in hospitals and communities. Unfortunately, a great number of these prescriptions are unnecessary or inappropriate. Antibiotic abuse and misuse have several negative consequences, including drug-related adverse events, the emergence of multidrug resistant bacterial pathogens, the development of Clostridium difficile infection, the negative impact on microbiota, and undertreatment risks. In this paper, the principle of and strategies for paediatric antimicrobial stewardship (AS) programs, the effects of AS interventions and the common barriers to development and implementation of AS programs are discussed. DISCUSSION: Over the last few years, there have been significant shortages in the development and availability of new antibiotics; therefore, the implementation of strategies to preserve the activity of existing antimicrobial agents has become an urgent public health priority. AS is one such approach. The need for formal AS programs in paediatrics was officially recognized only recently, considering the widespread use of antibiotics in children and the different antimicrobial resistance patterns that these subjects exhibit in comparison to adult and elderly patients. However, not all problems related to the implementation of AS programs among paediatric patients are solved. The most important remaining problems involve educating paediatricians, creating a multidisciplinary interprofessional AS team able to prepare guidelines, monitoring antibiotic prescriptions and defining corrective measures, and the availability of administrative consensuses with adequate financial support. Additionally, the problem of optimizing the duration of AS programs remains unsolved. Further studies are needed to solve the above mentioned problems.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotics; Antimicrobial resistance; Antimicrobial stewardship; Bacterial resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27538503 PMCID: PMC4989524 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1772-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Antimicrobial stewardship strategies in paediatric settings
| Main Strategies |
Main studies on the impact of antimicrobial stewardship programs in paediatric settings
| Author and year of publication | Site of evaluation | Strategy | Type of control | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agwu et al., 2008 [ | Single hospital | World Wide Web-based antimicrobial restriction program, automated clinical decision support, facilitated approval, enhanced real-time communication among prescribers, pharmacists, and paediatric infectious disease fellows | Before and after implementation of the program, evaluation of user satisfaction, reports of missed and/or delayed doses, antimicrobial dispensing times and costs | Satisfaction increased from 22–68 % and from 13–69 % among prescribers and pharmacists, respectively. Reductions of 21 % and 32 % in the number of missed and delayed antimicrobial doses, respectively |
| Metjian et al., 2008 [ | Single hospital | Evaluation of outcomes and compliance resulting from empirical antibiotic therapy decisions | Intervention to modify antibiotic therapy | 45 % of prescriptions required an intervention. |
| Di Pentima et al., 2011 [ | Single hospital | Antimicrobial use indications were included as a mandatory field in the computerized information system | Prescriptions were reviewed by specialists | Reduction in antimicrobials of more than 30 % for both targeted and nontargeted drugs |
| Hersh et al., 2015 [ | Nine hospitals | Antimicrobial consumption after introduction of an antimicrobial stewardship program defined as a program able to continuously monitor use with the support of a dedicated team in some hospitals | Evaluation of days of therapy per 1,000 patient-days | Decline in average antibiotic use in hospitals with antimicrobial stewardship program of 11 % vs 8 % in those without the program |
| Filkelstein et al., 2008 [ | The community (16 non-overlapping communities) | Guideline dissemination, small-group education, frequent updates, education material for paediatricians and parents | Consumption of antibiotics | The intervention had no effect among children aged 3–23 months but was associated with a 4 % and 7 % decrease in antibiotic prescriptions in those aged 24–47 months and 48–71 months, respectively. |
| Gerber et al., 2013 [ | The community (162 clinicians) | One 1-h on-site education session followed by one year of personalized quarterly audits and feedback on prescriptions for respiratory infections or usual practice in a group of enrolled individuals | Consumption of antibiotics | Broad spectrum antibiotic prescriptions decreased from 27 % to 14 % among intervention practices and from 28 % to 23 % in controls. |