Antimicrobial stewardship markers and healthcare-associated pneumonia threshold criteria in UK hospitals: analysis of the MicroGuideTm application

Author:

Moore Luke S P12,Baltas Ioannis34ORCID,Amos James5,Cooray Mineli6,Hughes Stephen1ORCID,Freeman Rachel7ORCID,Ashfield Tom5

Affiliation:

1. Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust , London , UK

2. Imperial College London, NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Healthcare Associated Infections and Antimicrobial Resistance , London , UK

3. Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation, Institute of Child Health, University College London , London , UK

4. Department of Microbiology, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust , London , UK

5. Pfizer , Tadworth, Surrey , UK

6. University of Warwick , Coventry, Warwickshire , UK

7. Real World Solutions, IQVIA , London , UK

Abstract

Abstract Background To address antimicrobial resistance, antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) principles must be implemented and adhered to. Clinical decision aids such as the MicroGuideTM app are an important part of these efforts. We sought to evaluate the consistency of core AMS information and the diversity of classification thresholds for healthcare-associated pneumonia (HAP) in the MicroGuide app. Methods Guidelines in the MicroGuide app were extracted and analysed for content related to AMS and HAP. Guidelines were characterized according to HAP naming classification; community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) classifications were analysed to serve as a comparator group. Results In total, 115 trusts (119 hospitals) were included. Nearly all hospitals had developed MicroGuide sections on AMS (n = 112/119, 94%) and sepsis management (n = 117/119, 98%). Other AMS sections were outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (47%), antifungal stewardship (70%), critical care (23%) and IV to oral switch therapy (83%). Only 9% of hospitals included guidance on the maximum six key AMS sections identified. HAP definitions varied widely across hospitals with some classifying by time to onset and some classifying by severity or complexity. The largest proportion of HAP guidelines based classification on severity/complexity (n = 69/119, 58%). By contrast, definitions in CAP guidelines were uniform. Conclusions The high heterogeneity in HAP classification identified suggests inconsistency of practice in identifying thresholds for HAP in the UK. This complicates HAP management and AMS practices. To address HAP in alignment with AMS principles, a comprehensive strategy that prioritizes uniform clinical definitions and thresholds should be developed.

Funder

Pfizer Inc.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference44 articles.

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3. Tackling antimicrobial resistance 2019–2024. GOV.UK,;Global and Public Health Group, Emergency Preparedness and Health Protection Policy Directorate,2019

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