Division of Population and Behavioural Sciences, School of Medicine, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, United Kingdom.
Division of Population Health and Genomics, School of Medicine, University of Dundee, Dundee, United Kingdom.
PLoS Med. 2019 Jun 7;16(6):e1002825. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002825. eCollection 2019 Jun.
Primary care antimicrobial stewardship interventions can improve antimicrobial prescribing, but there is less evidence that they reduce rates of resistant infection. This study examined changes in broad-spectrum antimicrobial prescribing in the community and resistance in people admitted to hospital with community-associated coliform bacteraemia associated with a primary care stewardship intervention.
Segmented regression analysis of data on all patients registered with a general practitioner in the National Health Service (NHS) Tayside region in the east of Scotland, UK, from 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2015 was performed, examining associations between a primary care antimicrobial stewardship intervention in 2009 and primary care prescribing of fluoroquinolones, cephalosporins, and co-amoxiclav and resistance to the same three antimicrobials/classes among community-associated coliform bacteraemia. Prescribing outcomes were the rate per 1,000 population prescribed each antimicrobial/class per quarter. Resistance outcomes were proportion of community-associated (first 2 days of hospital admission) coliform (Escherichia coli, Proteus spp., or Klebsiella spp.) bacteraemia among adult (18+ years) patients resistant to each antimicrobial/class. 11.4% of 3,442,205 oral antimicrobial prescriptions dispensed in primary care over the study period were for targeted antimicrobials. There were large, statistically significant reductions in prescribing at 1 year postintervention that were larger by 3 years postintervention when the relative reduction was -68.8% (95% CI -76.3 to -62.1) and the absolute reduction -6.3 (-7.6 to -5.2) people exposed per 1,000 population per quarter for fluoroquinolones; relative -74.0% (-80.3 to -67.9) and absolute reduction -6.1 (-7.2 to -5.2) for cephalosporins; and relative -62.3% (-66.9 to -58.1) and absolute reduction -6.8 (-7.7 to -6.0) for co-amoxiclav, all compared to their prior trends. There were 2,143 eligible bacteraemia episodes involving 2,004 patients over the study period (mean age 73.7 [SD 14.8] years; 51.4% women). There was no increase in community-associated coliform bacteraemia admissions associated with reduced community broad-spectrum antimicrobial use. Resistance to targeted antimicrobials reduced by 3.5 years postintervention compared to prior trends, but this was not statistically significant for co-amoxiclav. Relative and absolute changes were -34.7% (95% CI -52.3 to -10.6) and -63.5 (-131.8 to -12.8) resistant bacteraemia per 1,000 bacteraemia per quarter for fluoroquinolones; -48.3% (-62.7 to -32.3) and -153.1 (-255.7 to -77.0) for cephalosporins; and -17.8% (-47.1 to 20.8) and -63.6 (-206.4 to 42.4) for co-amoxiclav, respectively. Overall, there was reversal of a previously rising rate of fluoroquinolone resistance and flattening of previously rising rates of cephalosporin and co-amoxiclav resistance. The limitations of this study include that associations are not definitive evidence of causation and that potential effects of underlying secular trends in the postintervention period and/or of other interventions occurring simultaneously cannot be definitively excluded.
In this population-based study in Scotland, compared to prior trends, there were very large reductions in community broad-spectrum antimicrobial use associated with the stewardship intervention. In contrast, changes in resistance among coliform bacteraemia were more modest. Prevention of resistance through judicious use of new antimicrobials may be more effective than trying to reverse resistance that has become established.
初级保健抗菌药物管理干预措施可以改善抗菌药物的使用,但减少耐药感染的证据较少。本研究检测了与初级保健管理干预相关的社区广泛使用抗菌药物和社区相关肠杆菌科菌血症相关耐药性的变化。
对 2005 年 1 月至 2015 年 12 月期间英国苏格兰泰赛德国民保健服务(NHS)地区所有登记的全科医生患者的数据进行了分段回归分析,以检验 2009 年初级保健抗菌药物管理干预与社区相关肠杆菌科菌血症中氟喹诺酮类、头孢菌素类和复方新诺明的初级保健处方之间的关系。处方结果为每季度每 1000 人/每 1000 人规定的每种抗菌药物/类别的比率。耐药性结果为成人(18 岁以上)患者中社区相关(入院前 2 天)肠杆菌科(大肠埃希菌、变形杆菌属或克雷伯菌属)对抗菌药物/类别的耐药率。在研究期间,初级保健中开出的 3442205 份口服抗菌药物处方中,有 11.4%是针对目标抗菌药物的。在干预后 1 年,处方量有较大的、统计学显著的减少,在干预后 3 年时,相对减少了-68.8%(95%CI-76.3 至-62.1),绝对减少了-6.3(-7.6 至-5.2)人每 1000 人/每季度接受暴露,氟喹诺酮类;相对减少-74.0%(-80.3 至-67.9),绝对减少-6.1(-7.2 至-5.2)人接受头孢菌素类;相对减少-62.3%(-66.9 至-58.1),绝对减少-6.8(-7.7 至-6.0)人接受复方新诺明,与之前的趋势相比。研究期间共有 2143 例符合条件的菌血症发作,涉及 2004 例患者(平均年龄 73.7[SD 14.8]岁;51.4%为女性)。与社区广谱抗菌药物使用减少相关的社区相关肠杆菌科菌血症入院人数没有增加。与之前的趋势相比,与目标抗菌药物相关的耐药性在干预后 3 年内有所下降,但对于复方新诺明来说,这并不具有统计学意义。相对和绝对变化分别为每 1000 例菌血症/每季度 34.7%(95%CI-52.3 至-10.6)和-63.5(-131.8 至-12.8)的耐药菌血症;头孢菌素类为-48.3%(-62.7 至-32.3)和-153.1(-255.7 至-77.0);复方新诺明为-17.8%(-47.1 至 20.8)和-63.6(-206.4 至 42.4)。总的来说,氟喹诺酮类耐药率的上升趋势得到了扭转,头孢菌素类和复方新诺明耐药率的上升趋势也得到了缓解。本研究的局限性包括,关联并非因果关系的明确证据,并且不能明确排除干预后期间和/或同时发生的其他干预措施的潜在影响。
在苏格兰的这项基于人群的研究中,与之前的趋势相比,社区广泛使用抗菌药物的情况有了非常大的减少,与管理干预有关。相比之下,肠杆菌科菌血症的耐药性变化则较为温和。通过合理使用新抗菌药物来预防耐药性可能比试图逆转已建立的耐药性更有效。