Hawkins Marten R, Thottacherry Elizabeth, Juthani Prerak, Aronson Jenny, Chang Amy, Amanatullah Derek F, Markovits Jessie, Shen Sa, Holubar Marisa, Andrews Jason R, Parsonnet Julie, Furukawa Daisuke
Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2024 Nov 16;11(12):ofae683. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofae683. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Although intravenous antibiotics have historically been the standard of care for bone and joint infections, clinical trial data have highlighted the safety and efficacy of oral antibiotics. Despite this, intravenous antibiotics are still commonly used, and evaluations of institutional guidelines advancing oral antibiotic use are limited.
In April 2023, we implemented a new institutional guideline to preferentially treat patients with bone and joint infections with oral antibiotics. The postguideline cohort was compared with a historical preguideline cohort via retrospective chart review. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients discharged exclusively on oral antibiotics. Secondary outcomes included 90-day treatment failure, length of stay, and adverse effects.
One hundred eighty-six patients (53 preguideline and 133 postguideline) were included in the analysis. Patients in the postguideline cohort were more likely to be discharged exclusively on oral antibiotics (25% vs 70%; < .01), with no difference in 90-day treatment failure (8% vs 9%; = .75). Patients in the postguideline cohort had a shorter length of stay than preguideline (median, 8 vs 7 days; = .04) and trended toward fewer peripherally inserted central catheter-related adverse events (6% vs 1%; = .07).
An institutional guideline was effective in increasing the proportion of patients with bone and joint infections discharged on oral antibiotics. We observed similar clinical outcomes after implementing the guidelines while reducing length of hospital stay.
尽管静脉注射抗生素在历史上一直是骨与关节感染的标准治疗方法,但临床试验数据凸显了口服抗生素的安全性和有效性。尽管如此,静脉注射抗生素仍被普遍使用,而关于推进口服抗生素使用的机构指南的评估却很有限。
2023年4月,我们实施了一项新的机构指南,优先使用口服抗生素治疗骨与关节感染患者。通过回顾性病历审查,将指南实施后的队列与历史指南前队列进行比较。主要结局是仅接受口服抗生素出院的患者比例。次要结局包括90天治疗失败率、住院时间和不良反应。
186例患者(53例指南前和133例指南后)纳入分析。指南实施后队列中的患者更有可能仅接受口服抗生素出院(25%对70%;<0.01),90天治疗失败率无差异(8%对9%;=0.75)。指南实施后队列中的患者住院时间比指南前短(中位数,8天对7天;=0.04),外周静脉穿刺中心静脉导管相关不良事件有减少趋势(6%对1%;=0.07)。
一项机构指南有效地提高了骨与关节感染患者口服抗生素出院的比例。我们在实施指南后观察到类似的临床结局,同时缩短了住院时间。