Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Lantana Consulting Group, Thetford, Vermont.
JAMA Netw Open. 2021 Mar 1;4(3):e212007. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.2007.
Hospital antimicrobial consumption data are widely available; however, large-scale assessments of the quality of antimicrobial use in US hospitals are limited.
To evaluate the appropriateness of antimicrobial use for hospitalized patients treated for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) or urinary tract infection (UTI) present at admission or for patients who had received fluoroquinolone or intravenous vancomycin treatment.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study included data from a prevalence survey of hospitalized patients in 10 Emerging Infections Program sites. Random samples of inpatients on hospital survey dates from May 1 to September 30, 2015, were identified. Medical record data were collected for eligible patients with 1 or more of 4 treatment events (CAP, UTI, fluoroquinolone treatment, or vancomycin treatment), which were selected on the basis of common infection types reported and antimicrobials given to patients in the prevalence survey. Data were analyzed from August 1, 2017, to May 31, 2020.
Antimicrobial treatment for CAP or UTI or with fluoroquinolones or vancomycin.
The percentage of antimicrobial use that was supported by medical record data (including infection signs and symptoms, microbiology test results, and antimicrobial treatment duration) or for which some aspect of use was unsupported. Unsupported antimicrobial use was defined as (1) use of antimicrobials to which the pathogen was not susceptible, use in the absence of documented infection signs or symptoms, or use without supporting microbiologic data; (2) use of antimicrobials that deviated from recommended guidelines; or (3) use that exceeded the recommended duration.
Of 12 299 patients, 1566 patients (12.7%) in 192 hospitals were included; the median age was 67 years (interquartile range, 53-79 years), and 864 (55.2%) were female. A total of 219 patients (14.0%) were included in the CAP analysis, 452 (28.9%) in the UTI analysis, 550 (35.1%) in the fluoroquinolone analysis, and 403 (25.7%) in the vancomycin analysis; 58 patients (3.7%) were included in both fluoroquinolone and vancomycin analyses. Overall, treatment was unsupported for 876 of 1566 patients (55.9%; 95% CI, 53.5%-58.4%): 110 of 403 (27.3%) who received vancomycin, 256 of 550 (46.6%) who received fluoroquinolones, 347 of 452 (76.8%) with a diagnosis of UTI, and 174 of 219 (79.5%) with a diagnosis of CAP. Among patients with unsupported treatment, common reasons included excessive duration (103 of 174 patients with CAP [59.2%]) and lack of documented infection signs or symptoms (174 of 347 patients with UTI [50.1%]).
The findings suggest that standardized assessments of hospital antimicrobial prescribing quality can be used to estimate the appropriateness of antimicrobial use in large groups of hospitals. These assessments, performed over time, may inform evaluations of the effects of antimicrobial stewardship initiatives nationally.
医院抗菌药物消耗数据广泛可用;然而,对美国医院抗菌药物使用质量的大规模评估是有限的。
评估社区获得性肺炎 (CAP) 或尿路感染 (UTI) 入院时治疗或接受氟喹诺酮类或静脉万古霉素治疗的住院患者抗菌药物使用的适当性。
设计、地点和参与者:本横断面研究包括来自 10 个新兴传染病项目地点住院患者患病率调查的数据。从 2015 年 5 月 1 日至 9 月 30 日的医院调查日期中确定住院患者的随机样本。为符合以下条件的患者收集病历数据:有 1 项或多项治疗事件(CAP、UTI、氟喹诺酮类治疗或万古霉素治疗),这些治疗事件是根据报告的常见感染类型和患病率调查中患者使用的抗菌药物选择的。数据分析于 2017 年 8 月 1 日至 2020 年 5 月 31 日进行。
CAP 或 UTI 的抗菌治疗或使用氟喹诺酮类或万古霉素。
有病历数据支持的抗菌药物使用百分比(包括感染迹象和症状、微生物学检测结果和抗菌药物治疗持续时间)或某些方面使用不支持。不支持的抗菌药物使用定义为:(1)使用对病原体不敏感的抗菌药物,在没有记录感染迹象或症状的情况下使用,或在没有支持性微生物学数据的情况下使用;(2)使用不符合推荐指南的抗菌药物;或(3)使用超过推荐持续时间。
在 12299 名患者中,有 192 家医院的 1566 名患者(12.7%)入选;中位年龄为 67 岁(四分位距,53-79 岁),864 名(55.2%)为女性。共有 219 名患者(14.0%)纳入 CAP 分析,452 名患者(28.9%)纳入 UTI 分析,550 名患者(35.1%)纳入氟喹诺酮类分析,403 名患者(25.7%)纳入万古霉素分析;58 名患者(3.7%)同时纳入氟喹诺酮类和万古霉素分析。总体而言,1566 名患者中有 876 名(55.9%;95%CI,53.5%-58.4%)治疗不支持:403 名接受万古霉素治疗的患者中有 110 名(27.3%),550 名接受氟喹诺酮类治疗的患者中有 256 名(46.6%),452 名诊断为 UTI 的患者中有 347 名(76.8%),219 名诊断为 CAP 的患者中有 174 名(79.5%)。在治疗不支持的患者中,常见原因包括持续时间过长(174 名 CAP 患者中有 103 名[59.2%])和缺乏记录的感染迹象或症状(347 名 UTI 患者中有 174 名[50.1%])。
研究结果表明,标准化评估医院抗菌药物处方质量可用于估计大量医院抗菌药物使用的适当性。这些随着时间的推移进行的评估可能为全国范围内抗菌药物管理计划效果的评估提供信息。