Measuring antimicrobial prescribing quality in outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) services: development and evaluation of a dedicated national antimicrobial prescribing survey

Author:

Friedman N Deborah12,Lim Seok M3ORCID,James Rodney1,Ingram Robyn1,O’Reilly Mary4,Pollard James G D25,Koning Sonia4,George Catherine16,Rajkhowa Arjun1,Johnson Douglas F37,Buising Kirsty L17

Affiliation:

1. National Centre for Antimicrobial Stewardship, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

2. Barwon Health, Geelong, VIC, Australia

3. Department of General Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

4. Eastern Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

5. Cabrini Health, VIC, Australia

6. Pharmacy Department, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

7. Department of Infectious Diseases, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background Antimicrobial stewardship programmes are important in driving safety and quality of antimicrobial prescribing. The National Antimicrobial Prescribing Survey (NAPS) is a point-prevalence audit of inpatient antimicrobial prescribing in Australian hospitals. Objectives To design and adapt the NAPS tool for use in the outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) and hospital-in-the-home (HITH) setting. Methods An inter-disciplinary working group with expertise in OPAT and HITH services was established to adapt the NAPS template for use in the OPAT setting—called HITH-NAPS. This was initially trialled in 5 HITH services, subsequently adapted following participant feedback, then offered nationally to 50 services in 2017. Results There were 1154 prescriptions for 715 patients audited via the HITH-NAPS. The most common antimicrobials prescribed were cefazolin (22%), flucloxacillin (12%), piperacillin/tazobactam (10%) and ceftriaxone (10%). The most common infections treated were cellulitis (30%) and respiratory tract infections (14%). Eighty-seven percent of prescriptions were assessed as appropriate, 11% inappropriate and 2% not assessable. Prolonged durations of antimicrobials and unnecessarily broad-spectrum antibiotics were used in 9% of prescriptions. Conclusions The HITH-NAPS pilot project revealed that auditing of this type is feasible in HITH. It showed that antibiotic use in these HITH services was generally appropriate, but there are some areas for improvement. A national OPAT/HITH-NAPS can facilitate benchmarking between services, identify potentially inappropriate prescribing and help guide quality improvement.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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