Singh Sanjeev, Menon Vidya P, Mohamed Zubair U, Kumar V Anil, Nampoothiri Vrinda, Sudhir Sangita, Moni Merlin, Dipu T S, Dutt Ananya, Edathadathil Fabia, Keerthivasan G, Kaye Keith S, Patel Payal K
Department of Medical Administration, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, India.
Department of Internal Medicine, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, India.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2018 Nov 8;6(4):ofy290. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofy290. eCollection 2019 Apr.
Antimicrobial resistance is a major public health threat internationally but, particularly in India. A primary contributing factor to this rise in resistance includes unregulated access to antimicrobials. Implementing antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) in the acute hospital setting will help curb inappropriate antibiotic use in India. Currently, ASPs are rare in India but are gaining momentum. This study describes ASP implementation in a large, academic, private, tertiary care center in India.
An ASP was established in February 2016 consisting of an administrative champion, hospitalist, microbiologist, intensivist, and pharmacists. Antimicrobial stewardship program interventions included postprescriptive audit and establishment of institutional guidelines. The ASP tracked appropriate drug selection including loading dose, maintenance dose, frequency, route, duration of therapy, de-escalation, and compliance with ASP recommendations. Defined daily dose (DDD) of drugs and cost of antimicrobials were compared between the pre-implementation phase (February 2015-January 2016) and post-implementation phase (February 2016-January 2017).
Of 48 555 patients admitted during the post-implementation phase, 1020 received 1326 prescriptions for restricted antibiotics. Antibiotic therapy was appropriate in 56% (742) of the total patient prescriptions. A total of 2776 instances of "inappropriate" antimicrobial prescriptions were intervened upon by the ASP. Duration (806, 29%) was the most common reason for inappropriate therapy. Compliance with ASP recommendations was 54% (318). For all major restricted drugs, the DDD/1000 patient days declined, and there was a significant reduction in mean monthly cost by 14.4% in the post-implementation phase.
Implementation of a multidisciplinary antibiotic stewardship program in this academic, large, Indian hospital demonstrated feasibility and economic benefits.
抗菌药物耐药性是全球范围内的一项重大公共卫生威胁,在印度尤为如此。耐药性上升的一个主要促成因素包括对抗菌药物的无节制获取。在急性医院环境中实施抗菌药物管理计划(ASP)将有助于遏制印度抗生素的不当使用。目前,ASP在印度很少见,但正在兴起。本研究描述了在印度一家大型学术性私立三级医疗中心实施ASP的情况。
2016年2月设立了一个ASP,由行政负责人、住院医师、微生物学家、重症监护医师和药剂师组成。抗菌药物管理计划干预措施包括处方后审核和制定机构指南。ASP跟踪适当的药物选择,包括负荷剂量、维持剂量、频率、途径、治疗持续时间、降阶梯治疗以及对ASP建议的依从性。比较了实施前阶段(2015年2月至2016年1月)和实施后阶段(2016年2月至2017年1月)药物的限定日剂量(DDD)和抗菌药物成本。
在实施后阶段收治的48555例患者中,1020例接受了132份限制使用抗生素的处方。在所有患者处方中,56%(742例)的抗生素治疗是适当的。ASP共干预了2776例“不适当”的抗菌药物处方。治疗持续时间(806例,29%)是治疗不适当的最常见原因。对ASP建议的依从率为54%(共318例)。对于所有主要限制使用的药物,每1000患者日的DDD下降,实施后阶段平均每月成本显著降低了14.4%。
在这家大型印度学术医院实施多学科抗生素管理计划证明了其可行性和经济效益。