Comparing optimization criteria in antibiotic allocation protocols

Author:

Jamieson-Lane Alastair12ORCID,Friedrich Alexander3,Blasius Bernd2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Auckland, Mathematics, Auckland 1142, New Zealand

2. Carl von Ossietzky, Universität Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany

3. University Medical center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands

Abstract

Clinicians prescribing antibiotics in a hospital context follow one of several possible ‘treatment protocols’—heuristic rules designed to balance the immediate needs of patients against the long-term threat posed by the evolution of antibiotic resistance and multi-resistant bacteria. Several criteria have been proposed for assessing these protocols; unfortunately, these criteria frequently conflict with one another, each providing a different recommendation as to which treatment protocol is best. Here, we review and compare these optimization criteria. We are able to demonstrate that criteria focused primarily on slowing evolution of resistance are directly antagonistic to patient health both in the short and long term. We provide a new optimization criteria of our own, intended to more meaningfully balance the needs of the future and present. Asymptotic methods allow us to evaluate this criteria and provide insights not readily available through the numerical methods used previously in the literature. When cycling antibiotics, we find an antibiotic switching time which proves close to optimal across a wide range of modelling assumptions.

Funder

School of Medicine and Health Science, Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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