Department of Infectious Diseases, The Alfred Hospital and Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
School of Primary and Allied Health Care, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2021 Mar 2;11(3):e046142. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046142.
Antimicrobial resistance is a growing global health threat, driven by increasing inappropriate use of antimicrobials. High prevalence of unnecessary use of antimicrobials in residential aged care facilities (RACFs) has driven demand for the development and implementation of antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) programmes. The Stepped-wedge Trial to increase antibiotic Appropriateness in Residential aged care facilities and model Transmission of antimicrobial resistance (START) will implement and evaluate the impact of a nurse-led AMS programme on antimicrobial use in 12 RACFs.
The START trial will implement and evaluate a nurse-led AMS programme via a stepped-wedge cluster randomised controlled trial design in 12 RACFs over 16 months. The AMS programme will incorporate education, aged care-specific treatment guidelines, documentation forms, and audit and feedback strategies that will target aged care staff, general practitioners, pharmacists, and residents and their families. The intervention will primarily focus on urinary tract infections, lower respiratory tract infections, and skin and soft tissue infections. RACFs will transition from control to intervention phases in random order, two at a time, every 2 months, with a 2-month transition, wash-in period. The primary outcome is the cumulative proportion of residents within each facility prescribed an antibiotic during each month and total days of antibiotic use per 1000 occupied bed days. Secondary outcomes include the number of courses of systemic antimicrobial therapy, antimicrobial appropriateness, antimicrobial resistant organisms, infection, change in antimicrobial susceptibility profiles, hospitalisations and all-cause mortality. Analyses will be conducted according to the intention-to-treat principle.
Ethics approval has been granted by the Alfred Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/18/Alfred/591). Research findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, conferences and summarised reports provided to participating RACFs.
NCT03941509.
抗菌药物耐药性是一个日益严重的全球健康威胁,其原因是抗菌药物的不合理使用不断增加。在养老院中过度使用抗菌药物的情况非常普遍,这推动了制定和实施抗菌药物管理(AMS)计划的需求。这项名为“增加养老院抗生素使用合理性的阶梯式试验和模型抗菌药物耐药性传播(START)”的研究将在 12 个养老院实施并评估以护士为主导的 AMS 计划对养老院抗生素使用的影响。
START 试验将采用 12 个养老院的阶梯式簇随机对照试验设计,在 16 个月内实施和评估以护士为主导的 AMS 计划。AMS 计划将纳入教育、针对老年护理的特定治疗指南、文件表格以及审核和反馈策略,这些策略将针对老年护理人员、全科医生、药剂师以及居民及其家属。干预措施将主要针对尿路感染、下呼吸道感染和皮肤软组织感染。养老院将按照随机顺序、每两次 2 个同时从对照组过渡到干预组,每 2 个月过渡一次,有 2 个月的过渡期和洗入期。主要结果是每个设施中每个月接受抗生素治疗的居民比例以及每 1000 个占用床位的抗生素使用总天数。次要结果包括系统抗菌治疗疗程数、抗菌药物的适当性、耐抗菌药物的生物体、感染、抗菌药物敏感性谱的变化、住院和全因死亡率。分析将根据意向治疗原则进行。
阿尔弗雷德医院人类研究伦理委员会(HREC/18/Alfred/591)已批准该研究的伦理。研究结果将通过同行评议的出版物、会议和向参与的养老院提供总结报告进行传播。
NCT03941509。