Literature DB >> 33724171

Decreasing antibiotic over-use by implementation of an antibiotic stewardship programme in preterm neonates in resource limited settings - a quality improvement initiative.

Anitha Kommalur1, Vidyalakshmi Baddadka1, Sahana Devadas1, Mallesh Kariyappa1, B Dakshayani1, Shilpa Krishnapura Lakshminarayana1, Suman P N Rao2, Praveen Venkatagiri2, Gayathri Devi Chinnappa1, Sushma Veranna Sajjan1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Antibiotics play a critical role in neonatal sepsis but excessive use is associated with adverse outcomes and the current prescribing rates of antibiotics are unacceptably high. AIM: To reduce antibiotic over-use in preterm neonates by implementing an antibiotic stewardship programme using a quality improvement (QI) initiative.
METHODS: This study was conducted at a neonatal intensive care unit in a resource-limited setting. The reasons for antibiotic over-use were analysed and an antibiotic stewardship programme was implemented by using a QI initiative. The duration of the QI was a 1-month baseline phase followed by 3 months of implementation which was undertaken in the form of Plan-Do-Study-Act (P-D-S-A) cycles. The sustainment phase was observed for 2 months. All neonates admitted to the preterm unit were included. The outcome measure was the antibiotic usage expressed as days of therapy (DOT)/1000 patient days.
RESULTS: In the baseline phase, DOT/1000 patient days was 1464 which fell to 706, 511, and 442 DOT/1000 patient days, respectively, over 3 months, resulting in a 65% reduction in antibiotic usage. This was achieved by a combination of efforts directed towards defining the conditions for no antibiotics, revising existing antibiotic policy, stopping orders at 48 hours, de-escalation to the narrowest spectrum antibiotic, stopping prophylactic antifungal agents and limited use of broad-spectrum antibiotics. The results were achieved without an increase in culture-positive sepsis or mortality.
CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of a tailored antibiotic stewardship programme through a QI initiative was effective and safe in reducing antibiotic use in preterm neonates in a resource-limited setting. ABBREVIATIONS: AIIMS, All India Institute of Medical Sciences; DOT, days of therapy; HIC, high-income countries; ICMR, Indian Council of Medical Research; LMIC, low- to middle-income countries; LOS, late-onset sepsis; NICU, neonatal intensive care unit; NNF, National Neonatology Forum; P-D-S-A, plan-do-study-act; QI, quality improvement; SNCU, Special newborn care unit.

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Keywords:  Antibiotic stewardship; implementation; preterm neonates; quality improvement

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33724171     DOI: 10.1080/20469047.2021.1886545

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Paediatr Int Child Health        ISSN: 2046-9047            Impact factor:   1.990


  1 in total

1.  Association Between Antibiotic Overexposure and Adverse Outcomes in Very-Low-Birth-Weight Infants Without Culture-Proven Sepsis or Necrotizing Enterocolitis: A Multicenter Prospective Study.

Authors:  Shanshan Hou; Yanqiu Wu; Yangyang Cao; Jinghui Zhang; Zhijie Liu; Cheng Guo; Yao Chen; Xuemei Sun; Min Li; Yanling Gao; Guoying Zhao; Shiping Niu; Zhiyuan Zhou; Yu Wang; Zhenying Yang; Lei Huang; Chengyuan Zhang; Tong Chen; Xia Li; Yongfeng Zhang; Peng Zhao; Meirong Bi; Riming Zhao; Yonghui Yu; Xinfeng Zhao
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  2022-03-14       Impact factor: 5.319

  1 in total

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