Literature DB >> 32611807

Reducing Vancomycin Use in a Level IV NICU.

Rana F Hamdy1,2, Sopnil Bhattarai3, Sudeepta K Basu2,4, Andrea Hahn5,2, Brian Stone2,4, Eleanor D Sadler6, Benjamin M Hammer6, John Galiote2,4, Julie Slomkowski7, Anne M Casto4,8, Katelyn P Korzuch4, Hannah Chase9,10, Nneka Nzegwu2,4, Isabella Greenberg3, Noelle Ortiz9,10, Carmen Blake8, Jaeho Chang3, James E Bost9,10, Asha S Payne4,11, Rahul K Shah3,12, Lamia Soghier2,4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Vancomycin remains one of the most commonly prescribed antibiotics in NICUs despite recommendations to limit its use for known resistant infections. Baseline data revealing substantially higher vancomycin use in our NICU compared to peer institutions informed our quality improvement initiative. Our aim was to reduce the vancomycin prescribing rate in neonates hospitalized in our NICU by 50% within 1 year and sustain for 1 year.
METHODS: In the 60-bed level IV NICU of an academic referral center, we used a quality improvement framework to develop key drivers and interventions including (1) physician education with benchmarking antibiotic prescribing rates; (2) pharmacy-initiated 48-hour antibiotic time-outs on rounds; (3) development of clinical pathways to standardize empirical antibiotic choices for early-onset sepsis, late-onset sepsis, and necrotizing enterocolitis; coupled with (4) daily prospective audit with feedback from the antimicrobial stewardship program.
RESULTS: We used statistical process u-charts to show vancomycin use declined from 112 to 38 days of therapy per 1000 patient-days. After education, pharmacy-initiated 48-hour time-outs, and development of clinical pathways, vancomycin use declined by 29%, and by an additional 52% after implementation of prospective audit with feedback. Vancomycin-associated acute kidney injury also declined from 1.4 to 0.1 events per 1000 patient-days.
CONCLUSIONS: Through a sequential implementation approach of education, standardization of care with clinical pathways, pharmacist-initiated 48-hour time-outs, and prospective audit with feedback, vancomycin days of therapy declined by 66% over a 1-year period and has been sustained for 1 year.
Copyright © 2020 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32611807     DOI: 10.1542/peds.2019-2963

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


  3 in total

1.  Time to positivity of blood cultures in neonatal late-onset bacteraemia.

Authors:  Sagori Mukhopadhyay; Sara M Briker; Dustin D Flannery; Miren B Dhudasia; Sarah A Coggins; Emily Woodford; Eileen M Walsh; Sherian Li; Karen M Puopolo; Michael W Kuzniewicz
Journal:  Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed       Date:  2022-03-10       Impact factor: 6.643

2.  Temporal Trends of Acute Kidney Injury and Associated Risk Exposures in Extremely Preterm Infants.

Authors:  Chih-Chia Chen; Yung-Chieh Lin; Shan-Tair Wang; Chao-Ching Huang
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2021-08-04       Impact factor: 10.614

3.  Reducing Duration of Antibiotic Use for Presumed Neonatal Early-Onset Sepsis in Greek NICUs. A "Low-Hanging Fruit" Approach.

Authors:  Ioannis Kopsidas; Grammatiki-Christina Tsopela; Nafsika-Maria Molocha; Eleni Bouza; Elisavet Chorafa; Evangelia Chorianopoulou; Vasileios Giapros; Despoina Gkentzi; Theodoros Gkouvas; Anastasia Kapetanaki; Korina Karachristou; Georgia Karavana; Eleni Kourkouni; Georgia Kourlaba; Maria Lithoxopoulou; Vassiliki Papaevangelou; Maria Polychronaki; Emmanuel Roilides; Tania Siahanidou; Evangelia Stratiki; George A Syrogiannopoulos; Christos Triantafyllou; Maria N Tsolia; Emmanouela Tsouvala; Theoklis Zaoutis; Nikos Spyridis
Journal:  Antibiotics (Basel)       Date:  2021-03-09
  3 in total

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