| Literature DB >> 35028673 |
Asma Al-Turkait1, Lisa Szatkowski1, Imti Choonara1, Shalini Ojha2,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe drug utilisation patterns in neonatal units.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotics; Drug utilisation; Rational prescribing
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35028673 PMCID: PMC8926961 DOI: 10.1007/s00228-021-03267-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 0031-6970 Impact factor: 2.953
Characteristics of infants admitted to neonatal units in England and Wales from 2010 to 2017
| 623,250 | 17,501 (2.8) | 40,607 (6.5) | 193,536 (31.0) | 371,606 (59.6) | ||
37 (35–40) | 26 (24–27) | 30 (29–31) | 35 (33–36) | 39 (38–40) | ||
2896 (2172–3500) | 820 (680–970) | 1380 (1170–1594) | 2236 (1910–2590) | 3365 (2956–3760) | ||
276,929 (44.4) | 8,077 (46.2) | 18,519 (45.6) | 88,491 (45.7) | 161,842 (43.6) | ||
5 (3–13) | 83 (58,107) | 43 (33–57) | 11 (5–18) | 3 (2–6) | ||
8,378 (1.3) | 4,072 (23.3) | 1,309 (3.2) | 1,217 (0.6) | 1,780 (0.5) | ||
| 407,948 (65.5) | 12,365 (70.7) | 38,025 (93.6) | 150,375 (77.7) | 207,183 (55.8) | ||
| 205,326 (32.9) | 1,001 (5.7) | 1,213 (3.0) | 41,660 (21.5) | 161,452 (43.4) | ||
1,598 (0.3) | 63 (0.4) | 60 (0.1) | 2834 (0.1) | 1,191 (0.3) |
IQR, interquartile range; SD, standard deviation
Fig. 1Most frequently used drug categories (British National Formulary – Children listing [7]) among newborn infants admitted to neonatal units in England and Wales (2010 to 2017)
Fig. 2Frequency of drug use by count of number of infants who received the drug at least once among A extremely preterm; B very preterm; C moderate to late preterm; and D term infants. (Note: scale of the Y-axis varies between the panels)
Fig. 3Frequency of drug use by number of days any infant received the drug among A extremely preterm; B very preterm; C moderate to late preterm; and D term infants. (Note: scale of the Y-axis varies between the panels)
Antibiotic use among infants admitted to neonatal units in England and Wales (2010–2017)
| Number prescribed antibiotics at least once | 423,918 | 17,245 | 40,113 | 136,753 | 228,807 |
| Length of stay (days) | 7 (1–527, 3–18) | 86 (1–527, 63–110) | 44 (1–419, 33–58) | 13 (1–407, 6–20) | 4 (1–309, 3–7) |
| Number of different antibiotics per infant | 2 (2–2, 1–17) | 5 (3–6, 1–17) | 3 (2–4, 1–14) | 2 (2–2, 1–12) | 2 (2–2, 1–13) |
| Number of days on antibiotics per infants | 3 (2–5, 1–305 | 18 (9–32, 1–305) | 6 (3–12, 1–223) | 3 (2–5, 1–188) | 3 (2–5, 1–183) |
| Proportion of care days on antibiotic(s) (%) | 60 (26–100, 1–100) | 27 (17–47, 1–100) | 15 (10–26, 1–100) | 31 (18–60, 1–100) | 100 (63–100, 1–100) |
| Number who received at least one course* | 136,859 | 15,073 | 22,167 | 34,132 | 65,487 |
| Number of courses* per infant | 0 (0–1, 0–16) | 2 (1–3, 0–16) | 1 (0–1, 0–15) | 0 (0–0, 0–10) | 0 (0–1, 0–11) |
All figures are median (IQR, range)
*Antibiotic course: antibiotics prescribed for at least 5 consecutive days. If there was a gap of ≥ 2 days between stopping and re-starting antibiotics, they were counted as two courses
Fig. 4Drugs with the largest change in frequency of use among infants born at <32 weeks’ gestation in England and Wales from 2010 to 2017. (Frequency of drug use was counted as the number of infants who received the drug at least once)