Days of Antibiotic Spectrum Coverage: A Novel Metric for Inpatient Antibiotic Consumption

Author:

Kakiuchi Satoshi12,Livorsi Daniel J12,Perencevich Eli N12,Diekema Daniel J1,Ince Dilek1,Prasidthrathsint Kunatum1,Kinn Patrick3,Percival Kelly3,Heintz Brett H4,Goto Michihiko12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA

2. Center for Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE), Iowa City Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Iowa City, Iowa, USA

3. Department of Pharmaceutical Care, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA

4. Pharmacy Service, Iowa City Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Iowa City, Iowa, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Days of therapy (DOT), the most widely used benchmarking metric for antibiotic consumption, may not fully measure stewardship efforts to promote use of narrow-spectrum agents and may inadvertently discourage the use of combination regimens when single-agent alternatives have greater adverse effects. To overcome the limitations of DOT, we developed a novel metric, days of antibiotic spectrum coverage (DASC), and compared hospital performances using this novel metric with DOT. Methods We evaluated 77 antibiotics in 16 categories of antibacterial activity to develop our spectrum scoring system. DASC was then calculated as cumulative daily antibiotic spectrum coverage (ASC) scores. To compare hospital benchmarking using DOT and DASC, we conducted a retrospective cohort study of adult patients admitted to acute care units within the Veterans Health Administration system in 2018. Antibiotic administration data were aggregated to calculate each hospital’s DOT and DASC per 1000 days present (DP) for ranking. Results The ASC score for each antibiotic ranged from 2 to 15. There was little correlation between DOT per 1000 DP and DASC per DOT, indicating that lower antibiotic consumption at a hospital does not necessarily mean more frequent use of narrow-spectrum antibiotics. The differences in each hospital’s ranking between DOT and DASC per 1000 DP ranged from −29.0% to 25.0%, respectively, with 27 hospitals (21.8%) having differences >10%. Conclusions We propose a novel composite metric for antibiotic stewardship, DASC, that combines consumption and spectrum as a potential replacement for DOT. Further studies are needed to evaluate whether benchmarking using the DASC will improve evaluations of stewardship.

Funder

National Center for Patient Safety

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

VHA Health Services Research and Development

Center for Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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