Suh Yewon, Ah Young-Mi, Chun Ha-Jin, Lee Su-Mi, Kim Hyung-Sook, Gu Hyun-Jun, Kim A-Jeong, Chung Jee-Eun, Cho Yoonsook, Lee Young-Hee, Hwangbo Shin-Yi, Kim Jeongmee, Kim Eu-Suk, Kim Hong-Bin, Lee Eunsook, Lee Ju-Yeun
College of Pharmacy and Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea.
Department of Pharmacy, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam 13620, Korea.
Antibiotics (Basel). 2021 Jul 14;10(7):853. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics10070853.
Although specialized pharmacists have been suggested to be essential members of antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs), not all hospitals in Korea operate ASPs with pharmacists involved. We aimed to evaluate the association of involvement of clinical pharmacists as team members of multidisciplinary ASPs with the incidence of antimicrobial-related adverse drug events (ADEs). Five tertiary teaching hospitals participated in this retrospective cohort study. At each participating hospital, we randomly selected 1000 participants among patients who had received systemic antimicrobial agents for more than one day during the first quarter of 2017. We investigated five categories of antimicrobial-related ADEs: allergic reactions, hematologic toxicity, nephrotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, and antimicrobial-related diarrhea. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate the potential impact of pharmacist involvement in ASPs on the incidence of ADEs. A total of 1195 antimicrobial-related ADEs occurred in 618 (12.4%) of the 4995 patients included in the analysis. The overall rate of ADE occurrence was 17.4 per 1000 patient days. Hospitals operating ASPs with pharmacists showed significantly lower AE incidence proportions than other hospitals (8.9% vs. 14.7%; < 0.001). Multidisciplinary ASPs that included clinical pharmacists reduced the risk of antimicrobial-related ADEs by 38% (adjusted odds ratio 0.62; 95% confidence interval 0.50-0.77). Our results suggest that the active involvement of clinical pharmacists in multidisciplinary ASPs may contribute to reduce the incidence of antimicrobial-related ADEs in hospitalized patients.
尽管专业药剂师被认为是抗菌药物管理计划(ASPs)的重要成员,但韩国并非所有医院都在开展有药剂师参与的抗菌药物管理计划。我们旨在评估临床药剂师作为多学科抗菌药物管理计划团队成员的参与情况与抗菌药物相关不良药物事件(ADEs)发生率之间的关联。五家三级教学医院参与了这项回顾性队列研究。在每家参与的医院,我们从2017年第一季度接受全身性抗菌药物治疗超过一天的患者中随机抽取1000名参与者。我们调查了五类抗菌药物相关的不良药物事件:过敏反应、血液学毒性、肾毒性、肝毒性和抗菌药物相关性腹泻。采用多变量逻辑回归分析来评估药剂师参与抗菌药物管理计划对不良药物事件发生率的潜在影响。在纳入分析的4995名患者中,共有618名(12.4%)发生了1195起抗菌药物相关的不良药物事件。不良药物事件的总体发生率为每1000患者日17.4起。开展有药剂师参与的抗菌药物管理计划的医院的不良事件发生率显著低于其他医院(8.9%对14.7%;<0.001)。包括临床药剂师的多学科抗菌药物管理计划将抗菌药物相关不良药物事件的风险降低了38%(调整后的优势比为0.62;95%置信区间为0.50 - 0.77)。我们的结果表明,临床药剂师积极参与多学科抗菌药物管理计划可能有助于降低住院患者抗菌药物相关不良药物事件的发生率。