Abstract
Abstract
Background:
Antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) are responsible for addressing unnecessary antimicrobial use. We describe our experience with a unique intervention to withdraw unnecessary antimicrobials.
Methods:
Design, Setting, Participants: descriptive case series of adult inpatients at a single academic medical center, December 2021 to December 2022; Intervention: hospital-wide policy allowing ASP to discontinue inappropriate antimicrobials in select cases not resolved by prospective audit and feedback; Measures: count, date, and generic names of antimicrobials prescribed; reason for antimicrobial withdrawal (prolonged duration, no evidence of infection, or other); withdrawals by inpatient service (surgical or medical); time from antimicrobial start date to withdrawal intervention; days of therapy (DOT) saved; “nudge effect” defined as the prescribing team self-discontinuing withdrawn antimicrobial within 24 hours of withdrawal notice; appeals to withdrawals; ordering of alternative antimicrobials following withdrawal; incident infections, readmission, in-hospital mortality within 30 days of withdrawal intervention.
Results:
There were 54 antimicrobials withdrawn among 36 unique patients during the study period; piperacillin-tazobactam followed by vancomycin were the most frequently withdrawn agents; prolonged duration of therapy or prophylaxis followed by no evidence of infection were the most common reasons for withdrawal; withdrawals occurred most often on surgical services; an estimated 236 DOT (27.2 DOT per 100 patient-days) were saved; 32% of withdrawals were appealed; alternative antimicrobials were ordered following 20% of withdrawals; no incident infections, readmissions or in-hospital deaths were definitively attributed to withdrawal intervention.
Conclusions:
Our antimicrobial withdrawal intervention was a safe and effective addition to ASP activities to reduce inappropriate antimicrobial use and improve prescriber accountability.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)