Amponsah Obed Kwabena Offe, Buabeng Kwame Ohene, Owusu-Ofori Alex, Ayisi-Boateng Nana Kwame, Hämeen-Anttila Katri, Enlund Hannes
Department of Pharmacy Practice, Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Health Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana.
Department of Clinical Microbiology, Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, Kumasi, Ghana.
JAC Antimicrob Resist. 2021 Feb 8;3(1):dlab008. doi: 10.1093/jacamr/dlab008. eCollection 2021 Mar.
Actionable data on antimicrobial use is important when planning strategic interventions such as antimicrobial stewardship to address the challenge of drug resistance, particularly in resource-constrained settings.
To assess the prevalence of antibiotic use, the pattern of commonly used antibiotics and patient factors that may be associated with the increased use of antibiotics in the study hospitals.
This was a cross-sectional study conducted using the WHO Methodology for Point Prevalence Surveys in hospitals. Chi-squared analysis, Fisher's exact test and logistic regression were employed to analyse statistically the data obtained.
The overall prevalence of antibiotic use in the hospitals was 60.5%. The commonest indications for antibiotic recommendations were community-acquired infections (36.5%), surgical prophylaxis (26.1%) and hospital-acquired infections (15.7%), among others. Very few (2.7%) of the patients had their samples taken for culture and susceptibility testing to guide therapy. Penicillins (48.7%), cephalosporins (23.5%) and fluoroquinolones (17.4%) were the most commonly prescribed antibiotics. Concurrent malaria infection [adjusted OR (AOR) 0.33, 95% CI 0.11-0.94, 0.04] and increasing age (AOR 0.98, 95% CI 0.96-1.00, 0.02) were associated with lower risk of antibiotic use.
The prevalence of antibiotic consumption in the hospitals was lower than that reported in similar studies in Ghana, but high relative to some reports from high-income countries. Most antibiotic therapy was empirical and not guided by culture and susceptibility testing. There is the need for application of the WHO classification for the selection of antibiotics and increased use of culture and susceptibility data to guide infectious disease therapy.
在规划诸如抗菌药物管理等战略干预措施以应对耐药性挑战时,尤其是在资源有限的环境中,关于抗菌药物使用的可操作数据非常重要。
评估研究医院中抗生素使用的流行情况、常用抗生素的模式以及可能与抗生素使用增加相关的患者因素。
这是一项采用世界卫生组织医院点患病率调查方法进行的横断面研究。采用卡方分析、费舍尔精确检验和逻辑回归对获得的数据进行统计学分析。
医院中抗生素使用的总体患病率为60.5%。抗生素推荐的最常见指征是社区获得性感染(36.5%)、手术预防(26.1%)和医院获得性感染(15.7%)等。很少有患者(2.7%)采集样本进行培养和药敏试验以指导治疗。青霉素(48.7%)、头孢菌素(23.5%)和氟喹诺酮类(17.4%)是最常用的抗生素。同时感染疟疾(调整后比值比[AOR]0.33,95%置信区间0.11 - 0.94,P = 0.04)和年龄增加(AOR 0.98,95%置信区间0.96 - 1.00,P = 0.02)与抗生素使用风险较低相关。
医院中抗生素消费的患病率低于加纳类似研究报告的水平,但相对于一些高收入国家的报告则较高。大多数抗生素治疗是经验性的,并非由培养和药敏试验指导。有必要应用世界卫生组织的分类来选择抗生素,并增加使用培养和药敏数据来指导传染病治疗。