| Literature DB >> 31296255 |
Ann Sarah Walker1, Eric Budgell2, Magda Laskawiec-Szkonter2,3, Katy Sivyer4, Sarah Wordsworth5, Jack Quaddy2,3, Marta Santillo4, Adele Krusche4, Laurence S J Roope5, Nicole Bright2, Fiona Mowbray4, Nicola Jones6, Kieran Hand7,8, Najib Rahman2,3, Melissa Dobson2,3, Emma Hedley2,3, Derrick Crook2,6, Mike Sharland9, Chris Roseveare10, F D Richard Hobbs11, Chris Butler11, Louella Vaughan12, Susan Hopkins13,14, Lucy Yardley4,15, Timothy E A Peto2,6, Martin J Llewelyn16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To ensure patients continue to get early access to antibiotics at admission, while also safely reducing antibiotic use in hospitals, one needs to target the continued need for antibiotics as more diagnostic information becomes available. UK Department of Health guidance promotes an initiative called 'Start Smart then Focus': early effective antibiotics followed by active 'review and revision' 24-72 h later. However in 2017, < 10% of antibiotic prescriptions were discontinued at review, despite studies suggesting that 20-30% of prescriptions could be stopped safely. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic prescribing; Antimicrobial stewardship; Hospitals
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31296255 PMCID: PMC6625068 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-3497-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Defining the patient population from routinely collected electronic health records
Fig. 2Analysis model
Fig. 3ARK schedule of enrolment, interventions, and assessments (SPIRIT figure). * Healthcare organisations are recruited to the study before enrolment but at varying calendar times, based on the fact that they can provide historical patient electronic healthcare record data pre-implementation. They are allocated an implementation date based on the stepped-wedge design. ** Follow-up finishes 12 months after the last randomised organisation implements the intervention, estimated June 2020. † There are no formal assessments. Outcomes are assessed using routinely collected electronic health records from patients admitted to acute/general medicine over the entire study period, pooled periodically during the trial
Fig. 4SPIRIT 2013 Checklist: Recommended items to address in a clinical trial protocol and related documents
Primary, secondary and other objectives and measures in the main trial
| Objectives | Outcome measures | Timepoint(s) of evaluation of this outcome measure |
|---|---|---|
| Co-primary objectives | ||
| To compare the effect of introducing the behavioural intervention on 30-day mortality post-admission as an acute/general medical inpatient (non-inferiority) | Death, ascertained from hospital records which are routinely updated from national death reporting | 30 calendar days after admission to acute/general medicine |
| To compare the effect of introducing the behavioural intervention on antibiotic exposure per acute/general medical admission (superiority) | Defined daily doses (DDDs) of antibiotics per acute/general medical admission, ascertained from electronic hospital prescribing records | Over each acute/general medical admission, including antibiotics prescribed at discharge |
| Secondary objectives | ||
| To compare the effect of introducing the behavioural intervention on antibiotic exposure using different metrics | DDD per occupied bed-day, days on antibiotics per admission and bed-day (length of therapy (LOT)),a antibiotic days per admission and bed-day (days of therapy, DOTa), carbapenem DDD, DOTa and LOTa (per admission and per bed-day), broad-spectrum DDD, DOTa and LOTa (per admission and per bed-day), IV and oral DDD, DOTa and LOTa (per admission and per bed-day), WHO-defined ’Access’, ’Watch’ and ’Reserve’ DDD, DOTa and LOTa (per admission and per bed-day), ’Access’ as a percentage of all antibiotic use | Over each acute/general medical admission, including antibiotics prescribed at discharge |
| To compare the effect of introducing the behavioural intervention on adverse outcomes | ICU admission during the current admission, total length of stay (hours), antibiotic restart after discontinuation,a emergency re-admission in the 30 days after discharge, | ICU admission over the current admission; for emergency re-admission, up to 30 days post-discharge; for |
| To evaluate the impact of the intervention on the faecal flora | Proportion of discarded faecal samples from medical inpatients from which extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-carrying | Repeated cross-sectional surveys over time |
| Tertiary objectives | ||
| To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the behavioural intervention | Resource utilisation and costs | Over the current admission and up to 30 days post-discharge |
| To quantify uptake and acceptability of the online training component of the behavioural intervention (process outcome) | Proportion of locally identified and pre-specified essential individuals who drive prescribing decisions for acute/general medical inpatients at the organisation who complete the online training (recorded electronically by individuals entering their name and work (NHS) email on the last page) or on an attendance list if the local organisation has opted to do face-to-face training sessions | Within 3 months of invitation to complete training |
| To quantify uptake of the ARK ‘review and revise’ procedure within the behavioural intervention (process outcome) | Proportion of regularly audited antibiotics prescriptions which document the ARK classification criteria Proportion of regularly audited antibiotics prescriptions which are stopped at ‘review and revise’ | Over 12 weeks following implementation date |
aIn organisations with individual electronic prescribing (rather than bulk) antibiotic data
Note: WHO definitions of ’Access’, ’Watch’ and ’Reserve’ antibiotics will be used, following the 2017 Essential Medicines List, using the PHE interpretation. Broad-spectrum is defined as co-amoxiclav; piperacillin/tazobactam; second (e.g. cefuroxime), third (e.g. ceftriaxone ceftazidime) or fourth (e.g. cefepime) generation cephalosporins or cephalosporin-beta-lactamase inhibitor combinations (e.g. ceftazidime-avibactam, ceftolozane-tazobactam); carbapenems; quinolones; azithromycin; tigecycline; aztreonam; and telithromycin. Cefaclor is not included as a second generation cephalosporin because it is administered orally and is not well absorbed