| Literature DB >> 34187563 |
Alyssa M Pandolfo1, Robert Horne2, Yogini Jani3, Tom W Reader4, Natalie Bidad1, David Brealey5, Virve I Enne6, David M Livermore7, Vanya Gant8, Stephen J Brett9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rapid molecular diagnostic tests to investigate the microbial aetiology of pneumonias may improve treatment and antimicrobial stewardship in intensive care units (ICUs). Clinicians' endorsement and uptake of these tests is crucial to maximise engagement; however, adoption may be impeded if users harbour unaddressed concerns or if device usage is incompatible with local practice. Accordingly, we strove to identify ICU clinicians' beliefs about molecular diagnostic tests for pneumonias before implementation at the point-of-care.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial prescription; Intensive care; Rapid molecular diagnostics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34187563 PMCID: PMC8243627 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-021-00961-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Supporting quotations for Molecular Diagnostic Necessity theme
| Subtheme | Supporting quotations |
|---|---|
| Positive results facilitate choosing targeted antibiotics | 1. [Molecular diagnostics] would provide something more diagnostic than just a non-specific CRP or white cells that could guide specific antibiotic choice if we wanted to start them. Because, of course, in most cases, we just have to choose the most appropriate antibiotic based on what we think is the cause, which, depending on how concerned we are about the patient, it would be… the more concerned you are about them, or the more unwell they look, the broader-spectrum antibiotic you might choose. So, it could be helpful to perhaps not just start them on meropenem or Tazocin [Piperacillin/Tazobactam]. |
| 2. […] if you had something [i.e., molecular diagnostics] that could give you quicker results you could give someone more appropriate antibiotics from the start. | |
| 3. [Molecular diagnostics] would mean your rationalisation of your antibiotic regime would be much faster. You’d be able to switch to one with the correct sensitivities within six hours rather than 12 to 24, which would be much better. – | |
| Positive results lower threshold for starting antibiotics | 4. […] if I had proof that there was a bacteria [ |
| 5. […] even if there is a positive result in the test I would still think about starting it [antibiotics]. I wouldn’t start it automatically. – | |
| 6. [Molecular diagnostics] might change what [antibiotic] I give but it wouldn’t decide whether I give anything. – | |
| 7. For starting antibiotics, it would probably not be helpful to know the microbiology [i.e., molecular diagnostic results] as such. Because for starting antibiotics, or for a decision of which antibiotics, you need to have a context. Once you know that the patient is deteriorating in some way, and the context is triggering the confirmation that this is not inflammation, it is actually infection, obviously, to know what is going on in the body, with a name with a species, can make a huge difference, definitely. – | |
| Negative results indicate absence of respiratory infection | 8. […] if that [molecular test result] was negative, I wouldn’t give her [vignette patient] any antibiotics. – |
| 9. If that [molecular test] comes up negative and I’ve got a patient who, yes, at the moment doesn’t look particularly infected, probably just still sit, watch and wait and see. […] But, a clear negative in a patient who’s otherwise now looking to be frankly septic, more septic than this does, then it might change the spectrum antibiotics I want to consider. So, say that [central] line was relatively new, so maybe I’m more suspicious of the line than I would have been otherwise. […] where it’s clearly negative, then it would change my thinking around other likely sources of infection. – | |
| Molecular diagnostic results increase confidence in prescribing decisions | 10. [Having molecular test results] would mean that you can be confident that you’ve identified a pathogen that is sensitive, and that you could use a more narrow-spectrum antibiotic to focus that pathogen that you think is responsible for the sepsis, rather than having a bit of a panic using a broad-spectrum antibiotic. […] [Molecular results will] help a lot in terms of keeping the more powerful antibiotics for the situations in which you really need them. And that, in turn, will help to reduce the antibiotic resistance in the future. – |
| 11. […] [If the molecular test] comes back positive, I come out of this state of diagnostic uncertainty, I feel much happier now. Because while I’m in the waiting zone I’m in a state of angst, have I made the right decision, have I made the wrong decision? […] And so great, if I’ve made a diagnosis more quickly, it’s lovely that we remove the diagnostic angst. And I can be happy that I’m now making a good decision for the patient and by proxy a good decision for the population. I don’t have to feel bad about needlessly increasing antibiotic resistance. – |
CRP C-reactive protein, PCR polymerase chain reaction
Supporting quotations for Molecular Diagnostic Concerns theme
| Subtheme | Supporting quotations |
|---|---|
| Unfamiliarity with molecular diagnostic test capabilities | 12. I need to know about the device, I think. What can it detect, in what populations has it been used, how confident can I be? We all know that I’ve got a fairly poor set of clinical tools for defining respiratory infection at the moment. But it’s before I’m going to start interpreting another one I need to know a bit more about that. – |
| 13. I’m not familiar with this machine; I’ve survived 30 years without having one. […] because I just don’t have a feel for the machine, I’d have to try it out for a bit and see what the results are. We have to try and use evidence based, don’t we? I’d be reassured if I knew that either it worked really, really well or, on the other hand, that it didn’t. – | |
| 14. Products come in and tests come in and it doesn’t necessarily change what we’re actually doing on a day to day until we’ve seen it work a few times. – | |
| Molecular diagnostics detecting non-pathogenic bacteria may lead to over-treatment | 15. […] how convinced would I be that it’s [molecular test] picking up a pathogen rather than just an incidental coloniser. I’m not sure it would change what I’d do. – |
| 16. […] there’s no test which is 100% specific, and there’s no test which is 100% sensitive. So yes, I’m thinking whether this [test] would lead to over-prescribing of antibiotics that might lead to an increase in drug resistance […] That’s why it’s very important to know how sensitive and specific the PCR is. There are a lot of commensals in our respiratory tract. | |
| 17. […] whether that [positive result] is a colonisation rather than infection it would still be the same decision-making processes. So new temperature, a change in the inflammatory markers, a change in the secretion burden. – | |
| Molecular diagnostics failing to detect pathogens may lead to under-treatment | 18. […] if I’ve growna nothing I’m not sure whether that would be depending on the sensitivities or whether that’d be reassuring enough to not cover the chest and just cover the abdomen. – |
| 19. If she [vignette patient] didn’t bring up anything [i.e., negative result], but we still suspected a chest infection, or the X-ray showed something, then we would start [antibiotics]. – | |
| Concern of patient deterioration while awaiting molecular diagnostic results | 20. […] six hours doesn’t seem that long. But that could have a detrimental effect because six hours could be too long for this patient. – |
| 21. If I thought it [molecular results] was something that was very convincing and she [vignette patient] was quite stable and I could wait two hours, then yes, potentially. But it doesn’t sound like you’re portraying a stable case; you’re portraying someone that has come from a local unit looking like a bronchiolitis, getting worse, needing intubating. – | |
| 22. I don't think you could justify waiting six hours to treat someone if they’ve got overt signs of sepsis. – | |
| 23. I wouldn’t start [antibiotics], I would wait a few hours because if I know in a couple of hours I’d have a result and she’s [vignette patient] not in shock and not very bad I would wait to see if something comes up positive. – | |
| 24. Because if you knew what the answer would be within six hours, and given that she’s [vignette patient] not systemically unwell at the moment, I would be more comfortable holding off [antibiotics]. – |
PCR polymerase chain reaction
aThis is a misapprehension; the device does not ‘grow’
Recommendations to facilitate molecular test uptake
| Concern raised during interview | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Unfamiliarity with molecular diagnostics | Publicise the technology’s purpose and benefits, particularly its rapidity, accuracy, and ability to facilitate targeted antimicrobial therapy |
| Identify and address any misconceptions held by clinicians | |
| Establish a trial period for clinician first-hand familiarisation | |
| Withholding antibiotics until receiving molecular diagnostic results | Emphasise that empiric antibiotics can be started and refined after molecular diagnostic results become available |