Hirschhorn L R, Currier J S, Platt R
Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1993 Jan;14(1):21-8. doi: 10.1086/646626.
To assess postoperative exposure to parenteral antibiotics and coded discharge diagnoses of infection as markers of nosocomial infection, postoperative morbidity, and potentially inappropriate antibiotic use after cesarean section.
Retrospective cohort study to compare automated markers with the criterion of record review.
Tertiary care hospital.
Women admitted to a large teaching hospital after April 15, 1987, and discharged before October 1, 1989, who underwent a nonrepeat, nonelective cesarean section and had received prophylaxis with a cephalosporin.
Antibiotic exposure and discharge diagnosis codes were obtained from a large electronic hospital data base. A sample of charts was reviewed to determine the presence of infection, other postoperative complications, and postoperative antibiotic exposure.
A total of 2,197 women who had undergone a nonrepeat nonelective cesarean section were included in the study cohort. These women were assigned to 6 subgroups based on postoperative antibiotic exposure status and discharge codes suggesting endometritis, other postoperative infection, or no infection. Review of 457 records indicated that the overall infection rate was 9%. Eight percent of all the patients had a coded diagnosis for infection, and 16% received some parenteral antibiotics after the first postoperative day. Exposure to at least 2 days of parenteral postoperative antibiotics was the best marker by which to discriminate between infected and uninfected patients, with a sensitivity of 81%, a specificity of 95%, and a positive predictive value of 61% for detecting infection. The corresponding figures for coded diagnoses for infection had rates of 65%, 97%, and 74%, respectively. The combination of discharge codes and exposure to parenteral postoperative antibiotics resulted in a more accurate but less sensitive marker for nosocomial infections, with a positive predictive value of 94% and a sensitivity of 59%. The groups with discordant parenteral postoperative antibiotics exposure and discharge codes for infection were enriched for errors in coding, noninfectious morbidity, and unexplained antibiotic use. Less than 1% of the entire cohort had > or = to 2 days of parenteral postoperative antibiotics without any reason apparent in the medical record.
Parenteral postoperative antibiotic exposure determined from automated pharmacy records correlated with the results of the more labor-intensive manual review of medical records for the identification of nosocomial infection. In addition, information on antibiotic exposure combined with coded discharge diagnoses provided a rapid screen to identify subgroups of patients with higher rates of infectious and noninfectious morbidity, unexplained antibiotic use, and errors in discharge coding. Information derived from electronic data bases created for administrative purposes may be useful as a marker for infectious complications, inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, and other issues related to total quality hospital monitoring.
评估剖宫产术后肠外抗生素的使用情况以及感染的编码出院诊断,以此作为医院感染、术后发病率以及剖宫产术后潜在不适当抗生素使用的指标。
回顾性队列研究,将自动指标与记录审查标准进行比较。
三级护理医院。
1987年4月15日之后入住一家大型教学医院并于1989年10月1日前出院的女性,她们接受了非重复、非选择性剖宫产手术并接受了头孢菌素预防用药。
从大型电子医院数据库中获取抗生素使用情况和出院诊断编码。对一部分病历样本进行审查,以确定是否存在感染、其他术后并发症以及术后抗生素使用情况。
共有2197名接受非重复非选择性剖宫产手术的女性被纳入研究队列。根据术后抗生素使用情况和提示子宫内膜炎、其他术后感染或无感染的出院编码,这些女性被分为6个亚组。对457份病历的审查表明,总体感染率为9%。所有患者中有8%有感染的编码诊断记录,16%在术后第一天后接受了某种肠外抗生素治疗。术后接受至少2天肠外抗生素治疗是区分感染和未感染患者的最佳指标,检测感染的敏感性为81%,特异性为95%,阳性预测值为61%。感染编码诊断的相应数字分别为65%、97%和74%。出院编码与术后肠外抗生素使用情况相结合,可得出一个对医院感染更准确但敏感性较低的指标,阳性预测值为94%,敏感性为59%。术后肠外抗生素使用情况与感染出院编码不一致的组中,编码错误、非感染性发病率和不明原因的抗生素使用情况更为常见。整个队列中不到1%的患者术后接受肠外抗生素治疗≥2天,而病历中未发现明显原因。
从自动药房记录中确定的术后肠外抗生素使用情况与为识别医院感染而进行的更为繁琐的病历人工审查结果相关。此外,抗生素使用信息与编码出院诊断相结合,可提供一个快速筛查方法,以识别感染性和非感染性发病率较高、抗生素使用不明原因以及出院编码错误的患者亚组。为管理目的创建的电子数据库所提供的信息,可能有助于作为感染并发症、抗生素处方不当以及与医院全面质量监测相关的其他问题的指标。