| Literature DB >> 31095276 |
Elizabeth M Krantz1, Jacqlynn Zier1, Erica Stohs2, Chikara Ogimi1,3,4, Ania Sweet5,6, Sara Marquis1, John Klaassen5, Steven A Pergam1,5,7,8, Catherine Liu1,5,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Outpatient antibiotic prescribing for acute upper respiratory infections (URIs) is a high-priority target for antimicrobial stewardship that has not been described for cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial stewardship; oncology; outpatient; respiratory viral testing; upper respiratory infection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31095276 PMCID: PMC7108137 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciz409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Figure 1.Study flowchart outlining the number of patients included in electronic medical record abstraction, chart review, and analysis. Abbreviations: ICD-10, International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification; URI, upper respiratory infection.
Baseline Characteristics of Outpatients With Upper Respiratory Infections
| Characteristic at First Clinical URI Encounter | Total Cohorta (N = 251 Patients) | Patients With Antibiotic Prescribedb (n = 81 Patients) |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical service | ||
| Bone marrow transplant | 71 (28%) | 8 (11%) |
| Hematology | 69 (27%) | 24 (35%) |
| Solid tumors | 43 (17%) | 16 (37%) |
| Satellite clinics | 68 (27%) | 33 (49%) |
| Viral test on day 0 | ||
| No | 154 (61%) | 64 (42%) |
| Yes | 97 (39%) | 17 (18%) |
| Patient demographics | ||
| Sex | ||
| Women | 123 (49%) | 45 (37%) |
| Men | 128 (51%) | 36 (28%) |
| Age, y | 59 (18–90) | 61 (20–90) |
| Race | ||
| White | 210 (84%) | 68 (32%) |
| Nonwhite | 30 (12%) | 11 (37%) |
| Unknown | 11 (4%) | 2 (18%) |
| Peak flu season | ||
| No (April–November) | 129 (51%) | 38 (29%) |
| Yes (December–March) | 122 (49%) | 43 (35%) |
| Patient clinical characteristics | ||
| Symptoms, all categoriesc | ||
| Fever | 39 (16%) | 15 (38%) |
| Cough | 154 (61%) | 57 (37%) |
| Sputum production | 62 (25%) | 33 (53%) |
| Runny nose | 71 (28%) | 19 (27%) |
| Nasal congestion | 113 (45%) | 40 (35%) |
| Sinus pain | 7 (3%) | 4 (57%) |
| Chest congestion | 14 (6%) | 9 (64%) |
| Sore throat | 81 (32%) | 27 (33%) |
| URI symptoms not otherwise specified | 52 (21%) | 13 (25%) |
| Symptoms, mutually exclusive categoriesd | ||
| Fever | 39 (16%) | 15 (38%) |
| Sputum production or chest congestion, without fever | 51 (20%) | 28 (55%) |
| Any other respiratory symptoms | 161 (64%) | 38 (24%) |
| Days from reported symptom onset to index clinical encounter | ||
| 0–2 | 65 (26%) | 15 (23%) |
| 3–7 | 80 (32%) | 28 (35%) |
| 8–22 | 34 (14%) | 15 (44%) |
| Unknown | 72 (29%) | 23 (32%) |
| Primary diagnosise | ||
| Hematological malignancy or disorder | 162 (65%) | 43 (27%) |
| Solid tumor | 86 (34%) | 38 (44%) |
| Other | 3 (1%) | 0 (0%) |
| Any previous hematopoietic cell transplantation | ||
| No | 169 (67%) | 61 (36%) |
| Yes, >100 days before URI | 60 (24%) | 18 (30%) |
| Yes, ≤100 days before URI | 22 (9%) | 2 (9%) |
| Any comorbiditiesf | ||
| No | 151 (60%) | 49 (32%) |
| Yes | 100 (40%) | 32 (32%) |
| Absolute neutrophil count,g thousands/µL | 3.31 (0.00–31.32) | 3.67 (0.00–15.50) |
| Absolute neutrophil counth <500/µL | ||
| No | 203 (96%) | 65 (32%) |
| Yes | 9 (4%) | 3 (33%) |
| Absolute lymphocyte count,g thousands/µL | 1.02 (0.03–14.00) | 1.10 (0.20–14.00) |
| Immunosuppressive medications in previous 14 daysh | ||
| No | 153 (61%) | 50 (33%) |
| Yes | 98 (39%) | 31 (32%) |
| Chemotherapy within previous 30 days | ||
| No | 113 (45%) | 32 (28%) |
| Yes | 138 (55%) | 49 (36%) |
| Antibiotics for non-URI indication at day 0i | ||
| No | 229 (91%) | 74 (32%) |
| Yes | 22 (9%) | 7 (32%) |
Summaries are n (%) for categorical variables and median (range) for continuous variables.
Abbreviation: URI, upper respiratory infection.
aPercentages are column percentages.
bPatients with antibiotic prescribed for URI in days 0–14. Percentages are row percentages.
cPatients may appear in more than 1 category.
dMutually exclusive categories.
eHematological disorders include myelofibrosis (n = 4), thrombocytopenia (n = 1), aplastic anemia (n = 2), hemolytic anemia (n = 1), amyloidosis (n = 1), acute intermittent porphyria (n = 1), chronic pancytopenia (n = 1), and 1 patient seen for possible Castleman’s disease. Other category includes 2 stem cell donors and 1 patient with an autoimmune disease.
fIncludes any asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, structural lung disease, chronic kidney disease, cardiac disease, or diabetes.
gMost recent count in 14 days before time zero. Counts only available for 212 patients.
hIncludes antithymocyte globulin, azathioprine, cyclosporine, mycophenolate mofetil, sirolimus, tacrolimus, ruxolitinib, dexamethasone, methylprednisolone, and prednisone.
iExcludes antibiotics used for Pneumocystis jiroveci prophylaxis.
Figure 2.Number of patients with and without an antibiotic prescription for upper respiratory infection (URI) by provider. Each bar along the x-axis represents a provider, and the height of each bar shows the total number of patients seen by each provider. The shaded area corresponds to the number of patients for whom the provider prescribed antibiotics, and the unshaded area shows the number of patients for whom the provider did not prescribe antibiotics. Among providers seeing 3 or more URI patients, the top 5 prescribers (each prescribed an antibiotic to ≥67% of the patients they saw), included 2 from the satellite clinics, 2 from the hematology service, and 1 from the solid tumor service.
Figure 3.Frequency of antibiotic prescriptions and viral testing for the URI in days 0–14 by clinical service. The total height of the bars reflects the percentages of patients in each category who were prescribed an antibiotic (orange bars) and who received a viral test (blue bars); these values are shown on top of the bars. Shading within the bars shows the relative timing of these prescriptions; tests with the darkest portions represent prescriptions or tests ordered on day 0 and lighter portions represent prescriptions or tests ordered later in the study period. Abbreviations: BMT, bone marrow transplant service; URI, upper respiratory infection.
Figure 4.Distribution of respiratory virus detected among positive tests using the first viral test per patient. All positive tests shown here used the local polymerase chain reaction test. Patients with more than 1 virus detected appear in more than 1 category. Abbreviation: RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.
Antibiotic and Antiviral Prescribing Among Patients With Viral Testing Performed on Day 0
| Prescription Summary | Viral Test Positive for Flu | Viral Test Positive for Virus Other than Flu | Viral Test Negative |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibiotics | ||||
| Number of patientsb | 12 | 57 | 20 | … |
| Antibiotic prescribed | 1 (8%) | 7 (12%) | 2 (10%) | .90 |
| Days from viral test result to first prescriptionc | ||||
| 0–1 | 0 (0%) | 3 (43%) | 1 (50%) | … |
| 2–10 | 1 (100%) | 4 (57%) | 1 (50%) | … |
| Antivirals | ||||
| Number of patientsd | 12 | 60 | 21 | … |
| Antiviral prescribede | 12 (100%) | 4 (7%) | 2 (10%) | <.001 |
| Days from viral test result to first prescriptionc | ||||
| 0–1 | 11 (92%) | 3 (75%) | 1 (50%) | … |
| 2–5 | 1 (8%) | 1 (25%) | 1 (50%) | … |
aUsing generalized estimating equations regression model.
bExcluding 154 patients without a test on day 0 (64 of whom received an antibiotic prescription), 7 patients with a test on day 0 but an antibiotic prescription before the viral test result was available, and 1 patient with a test on day 0 but test result date unknown.
cAmong patients with a prescription on or after viral test result.
dExcluding 154 patients without a test on day 0 (4 of whom received an antiviral prescription), 3 patients with a test on day 0 but an antiviral prescription before the viral test result was available, and 1 patient with a test on day 0 but test result date unknown.
eAll were oseltamivir except for 2 patients who received a ribavirin prescription, 1 with rhinovirus and respiratory syncytial virus and 1 with respiratory syncytial virus only.
Figure 5.Multivariable generalized estimating equation regression model estimates for the RR of antibiotic prescribing for the upper respiratory infection in days 0–14. Filled squares represent the RR, and bars connect the LCL and the UCL of the 95% confidence interval for each baseline variable. Multivariable model 1 included viral test on day 0, symptoms at presentation, and age. Multivariable model 2 included clinical service and symptoms at presentation. Abbreviations: BMT, bone marrow transplant service; LCL, lower confidence limit; RR, relative risk; UCL, upper confidence limit.