Antibiotic Diversity Index: A novel metric to assess antibiotic variation among hospitalized children

Author:

Markham Jessica L.12ORCID,Hall Matt13ORCID,Shah Samir S.4ORCID,Burns Alaina5,Goldman Jennifer L.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics Children's Mercy Kansas City, University of Missouri‐Kansas City School of Medicine Kansas City Missouri USA

2. University of Kansas School of Medicine Kansas City Kansas USA

3. Children's Hospital Association Lenexa Kansas USA

4. Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati Ohio USA

5. Department of Pharmacy Children's Mercy Kansas City, University of Missouri‐Kansas City School of Pharmacy Kansas City Missouri USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDespite nationally endorsed treatment guidelines and stewardship programs, variation and deviation from evidence‐based antibiotic prescribing occur, contributing to inappropriate use and medication‐related adverse events. Measures of antibiotic prescribing variability can aid in quantifying this problem but are not adequate.ObjectiveThe objective of this study is to develop a standardized metric to quantify antibiotic prescribing variability (diversity) within and across children's hospitals, and to examine its association with outcomes.MethodsWe performed a cross‐sectional study of empiric antibiotic exposure among children hospitalized during 2017–2019 with one of 15 common pediatric infections using the Pediatric Health Information System database. Encounters for children with complex chronic conditions, transfers in, and birth hospitalizations were excluded. Using the Shannon–Weiner entropy index, we quantified antibiotic diversity for each infection type using the d‐measure of diversity. Generalized linear mixed‐effects models were used to examine the association between hospital‐level antibiotic diversity and risk‐adjusted length of stay and costs.ResultsA total of 79,515 hospitalizations for common pediatric infections were included. Antibiotic diversity varied within and across hospitals. Infections with low mean antibiotic diversity included appendicitis (mean diversity [mDiv] = 4.9, SD = 2.5) and deep neck space infections (mDiv = 5.9, SD = 1.9). Infections with high mean antibiotic diversity included pneumonia (mDiv = 23.4, SD = 5.6) and septicemia/bacteremia (mDiv = 28.5, SD = 12.1). There was no statistically significant association between hospital‐level antibiotic diversity and risk‐adjusted LOS or costs.ConclusionsWe developed and applied a novel metric to quantify diversity in antibiotic prescribing that permits comparisons across hospitals and can be leveraged to identify high‐priority areas for local and national stewardship interventions.

Publisher

Wiley

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