Meropenem antimicrobial stewardship program: clinical, economic, and antibiotic resistance impact
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Identificadores
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Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Fecha de publicación
2018-10-26Título de revista
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
infección hospitalaria | carbapenems | farmacorresistencia microbianaMeSH
Carbapenems | Drug Resistance, Microbial | Cross InfectionResumen
Background. There are few prospective studies with sufficient duration in time to evaluate clinical and antibiotic resistance impact of Antibiotic Stewardship Programs (ASP).
Methods. Descriptive study between January-2012 to December-2017, pre-postintervention.
An meropenem ASP was initiated in January 2015, in patients who started treatment with meropenem an infectious diseases physician performed treatment recommendations to prescribers. Prospective information was collected to evaluate adequacy of meropenem prescription to local guidelines and to compare results between cases with accepted or rejected intervention. Analysis was performed to verify variables associated with intervention acceptance and with any significant change in meropenem consumption, hospital-acquired multidrug-resistant (MDR) bloodstream infections (BSIs) and 30-day all-cause crude death in MDR BSIs.
Results. Adequacy of meropenem prescription and de-escalation from meropenem treatment to narrower-spectrum antibiotic improved progressively over time, after ASP implementation (p<0.001). Interventions on prescription were performed in 330 (38.7%) patients without meropenem justified treatment, in 269 intervention was accepted and in 61 not. Intervention acceptance was associated with shorter duration of treatment, cost and inpatient days (p<0.05); intervention rejection was not associated with severity of patient. During the period 2015-2017, meropenem consumption decreased compared with 2012-2014 [Rate ratio (RR) 0.67; 95%CI: 0.58-
0.77, p<0.001]). Likewise decreased, hospital-acquired MDR BSIs rate (RR 0.63;
95%CI: 0.38-1.02, p=0,048) and 30-day all-cause crude death in MDR BSIs (RR 0.45;
95%CI: 0.14-1.24, p=0.09), coinciding in time with ASP start-up.
Conclusions. The decrease and better use of meropenem achieved had a sustained clinical, economic and ecological impact, reducing costs and mortality of hospital acquired MDR BSIs.