| Literature DB >> 36168492 |
Abstract
Recognition of antibiotic stewardship programs (ASPs) as essential components of quality health care has dramatically increased in the past decade. The value of ASPs has been further reinforced during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic because these programs were instrumental in monitoring antibiotic use, assessing emerging COVID-19 therapies, and coordinating implementation of monoclonal antibody infusions and vaccinations. ASPs are now required across hospital settings as a condition of participation for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and for accreditation by The Joint Commission. In the 2019 National Healthcare Safety Network annual survey, almost 89% of hospitals met the Seven Core Elements for ASPs defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than 61% of programs were co-led by physicians and pharmacists, evidence of the leadership role of both groups. ASPs employ many strategies to improve prescribing. Core interventions of preauthorization for targeted antibiotics, prospective audit and feedback, and development of local treatment guidelines have been supplemented with numerous emerging strategies. Diagnostic stewardship, optimizing duration of therapy, promoting appropriate conversion from intravenous to oral therapy, monitoring at transitions of care and hospital discharge, implementing stewardship initiatives in the outpatient setting, and increasing use of telemedicine are approaches being adopted across hospital settings. As a core function for medical facilities, ASP leaders must ensure that antibiotic use and ASP interventions promote optimal and equitable care. The urgency of success becomes progressively greater as complex patterns of antibiotic resistance continue to emerge, exacerbated by unpredictable factors such as a worldwide pandemic. © The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America 2021.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic Stewardship Programs; COVID-19; antibiotic stewardship interventions
Year: 2021 PMID: 36168492 PMCID: PMC9495416 DOI: 10.1017/ash.2021.180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Steward Healthc Epidemiol ISSN: 2732-494X
Antibiotic Stewardship Program Interventions and the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic
| Stewardship Intervention | Methods in Practice | Affected by COVID-19? | Going Forward |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-authorization |
Restricted formulary Approval obtained from AST/ID staff physicians or ID fellows Approval via order form/electronic order if criteria for appropriate use met. If not, further AST/ID approval needed |
Increased pushback or pressure to approve agents New disease with high morbidity and mortality Increased workload—process of approval burdensome |
Basic AS principles should be adhered to, despite unknowns. Leverage limited approval for up to 24 hours until more clinical/diagnostic data available Expand agents that can be approved via antibiotic order process, verified by any pharmacist, to relieve burden on AST and prescribers |
| Prospective Audit and Feedback |
Identify opportunities to discontinue, de-escalate or escalate therapy, clarify duration of therapy at 48–72 h (or earlier as appropriate) Typically implemented as a voluntary intervention-providers can accept or reject AST recommendations |
Overuse of antimicrobials despite no clear bacterial or fungal infection because of inflammatory response associated with COVID-19 (fever, leukocytosis) Providers decline AST recommendations. Less opportunity for face-to-face conversations |
Leverage electronic communications and videoconferencing when face-to-face conversations are not feasible. After a process of shared decision making, consider mandatory implementation for a limited number of AST interventions. |
| Diagnostic stewardship |
Reports of microbiology results constructed to maximize stewardship New technologies to improve diagnostics and turnaround time for results Integrate involvement by the AST to interpret and respond to microbiology results |
COVID-19 related fever and/or leukocytosis resulted in unnecessary diagnostic testing. Overtesting led to overprescribing for bacterial contaminants or colonization. |
Diagnostic stewardship can be utilized to limit inappropriate testing. AST involvement to interpret significance of test results |
| Duration of Therapy |
Define the course of treatment for specific infections based on evidence-based medicine Use of stop dates in antibiotic orders Monitor the full course of therapy from the inpatient setting through hospital discharge |
Antibiotic durations prolonged for patients who remained ill despite no evidence of active bacterial or fungal infection |
Durations based on diagnosed infection should not be extended without supportive data. When strong evidence (eg, via RCTs) exist for duration, mandatory implementation for a limited number of AST interventions should be considered. |
| IV to PO optimization |
Use of bioavailable oral antibiotics instead of the IV formulation of the same agent Transition to oral from IV antibiotics for susceptible organisms when appropriate |
Necessity to shorten lengths of hospital stay because of burden of COVID-19 cases during the surges: oral antibiotics allowed for more timely discharges to home, improved bed availability for acutely ill patients |
New data for invasive infections, such as endocarditis or osteomyelitis, suggest equivalent outcomes with oral medications in many scenarios. Optimize opportunities for oral antibiotic therapy |
| Transitions of care |
Improve transition of care from inpatient to outpatient settings for patients on intravenous antibiotics or high-risk oral antibiotics Identify patients being discharged on antibiotics and determine appropriateness of antibiotic choice and duration of treatment |
Reduced resources for outpatient visits and monitoring of patients discharged on antibiotics Overwhelmed skilled nursing and long-term care facilities |
Established multidisciplinary programs for transitions of care can better withstand unexpected changes in workload. Review of antibiotics prescribed at discharge can identify opportunities for stewardship. |
| Ambulatory ASP |
ASP interventions to reduce inappropriate prescribing in ambulatory care, particularly for acute respiratory tract infections |
Increase in telehealth visits may have affected prescribing. In regions with high numbers of COVID-19 cases, prescribing for outpatient respiratory tract infections decreased. |
Telemedicine should be further studied for outpatient treatment of common infectious diseases. |
| Tele-stewardship |
Access to stewardship expertise via electronic means—e-mail, phone consultation, or video conferencing Particularly crucial for hospitals that have limited resources and AS expertise, such as rural or critical-access facilities |
Increased uptake of telemedicine broadly has potentially opened up new acceptance of telemedicine and made technology more available. |
Telemedicine can be an important strategy across settings. Further development in this area can also be useful if there is another surge (eg, with a COVID-19 variant) that makes in-person, ‘handshake stewardship’ challenging. |
Note. AST, antibiotic stewardship team; AS, antibiotic stewardship; ID, infectious diseases; RCT, randomized controlled trials; IV, intravenous.