| Literature DB >> 31035663 |
Graeme Hood1, Kieran S Hand2, Emma Cramp3, Philip Howard4, Susan Hopkins5, Diane Ashiru-Oredope6.
Abstract
This study developed a patient-level audit tool to assess the appropriateness of antibiotic prescribing in acute National Health Service (NHS) hospitals in the UK. A modified Delphi process was used to evaluate variables identified from published literature that could be used to support an assessment of appropriateness of antibiotic use. At a national workshop, 22 infection experts reached a consensus to define appropriate prescribing and agree upon an initial draft audit tool. Following this, a national multidisciplinary panel of 19 infection experts, of whom only one was part of the workshop, was convened to evaluate and validate variables using questionnaires to confirm the relevance of each variable in assessing appropriate prescribing. The initial evidence synthesis of published literature identified 25 variables that could be used to support an assessment of appropriateness of antibiotic use. All the panel members reviewed the variables for the first round of the Delphi; the panel accepted 23 out of 25 variables. Following review by the project team, one of the two rejected variables was rephrased, and the second neutral variable was re-scored. The panel accepted both these variables in round two with a 68% response rate. Accepted variables were used to develop an audit tool to determine the extent of appropriateness of antibiotic prescribing at the individual patient level in acute NHS hospitals through infection expert consensus based on the results of a Delphi process.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; Start Smart then Focus; antibiotics; antimicrobial stewardship; days of therapy; inappropriate prescribing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31035663 PMCID: PMC6627925 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics8020049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Elements of antibiotic prescribing in hospitals relevant for evaluating appropriateness [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29].
| Prescribing Elements (Potential Audit Variables) | Comments | Selected for Audit |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| No antibiotic if not indicated (no reasonable evidence of infection) | Unnecessary antibiotic exposure selects for avoidable resistance [ | ✓ |
| Indication documented | Good practice for continuity of care but of uncertain relevance to resistance. | ✓ |
| Appropriate specimens taken for microscopy, culture, and sensitivity (MC&S)—blood cultures and suspected site of infection | Important for establishing evidence of infection and for targeting appropriate therapy but requires manual audit and >50% of cultures are negative [ | ✓ |
| No allergy or contra-indication to treatments | Important patient safety consideration but not relevant for resistance. | ✕ |
| Prompt administration of first dose | Important patient safety consideration in cases of severe sepsis but of uncertain relevance to resistance. Already captured by national sepsis audits. | ✕ |
| Treatment regimen adequate to cover most likely pathogens | Meta-analysis of RCTs reports increased risk of mortality if initial regimen inadequate [ | ✓ * |
| Treatment regimen not unnecessarily broad spectrum | Indiscriminate use of critical broad-spectrum agents unnecessarily selects for resistance [ | ✓ * |
| No redundant agents in treatment regimen | Unnecessary antibiotic exposure selects for avoidable resistance [ | ✓ |
| Treatment regimen compliant with local/national guideline or justified deviation | Validity dependent upon quality of local guideline. Relevance to resistance uncertain. | ✕ |
| Treatment regimen cost-effective | Not relevant to resistance. | ✕ |
| No underdosing | Limited evidence from modeling suggests that low doses may select resistance in pneumococci [ | ✕ |
| No overdosing | Important patient safety consideration but likely to reduce rather than increase risk of selecting resistance [ | ✕ |
| Correct route of administration | Relevant for efficacy, length of stay, and risk of line infection but of uncertain relevance to resistance. | ✕ |
| Prompt appropriate source control | Subjective assessment. Of uncertain relevance to resistance. | ✕ |
| No missed doses or delayed doses | Of uncertain relevance to selection of resistance. | ✕ |
| Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) for narrow therapeutic index drugs | Important primarily for patient safety (but also for efficacy); of uncertain relevance to resistance. | ✕ |
|
| ||
| Prompt discontinuation of antibiotics if alternative diagnosis established and infection excluded | There is RCT evidence that unnecessary continuation selects for multi-resistant organisms [ | ✓ |
| Appropriate broadening of spectrum in response to MC&S results | This may necessitate an increase in broad-spectrum agent use if indicated by MC&S results. Failure to adjust ineffective treatment to MC&S results is associated with a higher risk of mortality [ | ✓ * |
| Appropriate narrowing of spectrum in response to MC&S results | Evidence largely from observational studies suggests that de-escalation to narrow-spectrum agents is safe when patients are improving clinically and a plausible pathogen has been identified [ | ✓ * |
| Prompt referral to outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy OPAT services for suitable patients | Relevant for length of stay and risk of healthcare-associated infection (HCAI) but of uncertain relevance to resistance. | ✕ |
| Prompt switch from IV to oral route of administration when safe and effective | Relevant for length of stay and risk of line infection but of uncertain relevance to resistance. | ✕ |
| Antibiotic plan documented in the notes | Good practice for continuity of care but of uncertain relevance to resistance. | ✕ |
| No unjustified prolonged duration of treatment | There is evidence from RCTs and observational studies that unnecessarily prolonged duration selects for multi-resistant organisms [ | ✓ |
* Prescribing elements relating to antibiotic spectrum; deprioritised for audit tool prototype
Figure 1Overall Delphi results.