Resource Over-Utilization in Hospitalized Patients With Uncomplicated Skin and Soft Tissue Infections

Author:

Venugopalan Veena12ORCID,Crawford Robert3,Ho Kennedy2,Garg Mahek2,Park Haesuk2,Premraj Sasha4,Klinker Kenneth5,Cherabuddi Kartikeya16,DeSear Kathryn1

Affiliation:

1. University of Florida Health Shands Hospital, Fl, USA

2. University of Florida, College of Pharmacy, Gainesville, FL, USA

3. Novant Health, Forsyth Medical Center Winston-Salem, NC, USA

4. Ascension Sacred Heart Hospital Pensacola, FL, USA

5. Merck & Co., Kenilworth, NJ, USA

6. University of Florida, College of Medicine, FL, USA

Abstract

Background: Inpatient management of SSTIs utilizes considerable healthcare resources. The CREST+SEWS score categorizes patients with SSTIs into 4 severity classes. Hospitalizations can be avoided in Class I as they are treated as outpatients with oral antibiotics, whereas Class IV require hospitalization for intravenous antibiotics. Objective: The purpose of this study was to perform a budget impact analysis on CREST+SEWS Class 1 patients, to compare the medical costs of current treatment, in the inpatient setting with intravenous antibiotics, with a proposed alternative of using oral antibiotics in the outpatient setting. Further, resource utilization in Class I was evaluated. Methods: This was a retrospective study of adult patients hospitalized in 2015 for SSTIs who received >24 hours of antimicrobials. The CREST+SEWS scoring system was used to stratify patients into Class I to IV. Pharmacy and medical costs and resources associated with inpatient management of Class I SSTIs were derived from the itemized discharge records. Results: Of the 252 patients who met the inclusion criteria, 61 (24%) were classified as Class I. The total cost of treating Class I SSTI patients in the inpatient setting was $281,816 (cost per patient: $4,619) in 2015 USD. In the hypothetical situation of treatment with oral antibiotics in the outpatient setting, the cost savings were estimated to be $4,398 per patient. Fifty-three percent of patients had blood cultures, and on average, each patient received 2 radiographic tests. Conclusions: Identifying outpatient candidates, and avoiding tests with low diagnostic can reduce the economic burden of SSTIs.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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