A 72-h intervention for improvement of the rate of optimal antibiotic therapy in patients with bloodstream infections

Antimicrobial stewardship programs are implemented to optimize the use of antibiotics and control the spread of antibiotic resistance. Many antimicrobial stewardship interventions have demonstrated significant efficacy in reducing unnecessary prescriptions of antibiotics, the duration of antimicrobi...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of clinical microbiology & infectious diseases 2018, Vol.37 (1), p.167-173
Hauptverfasser: Murri, R., Taccari, F., Spanu, T., D’Inzeo, T., Mastrorosa, I., Giovannenze, F., Scoppettuolo, G., Ventura, G., Palazzolo, C., Camici, M., Lardo, S., Fiori, B., Sanguinetti, M., Cauda, R., Fantoni, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antimicrobial stewardship programs are implemented to optimize the use of antibiotics and control the spread of antibiotic resistance. Many antimicrobial stewardship interventions have demonstrated significant efficacy in reducing unnecessary prescriptions of antibiotics, the duration of antimicrobial therapy, and mortality. We evaluated the benefits of a combination of rapid diagnostic tests and an active re-evaluation of antibiotic therapy 72 h after the onset of bloodstream infection (BSI). All patients with BSI from November 2015 to November 2016 in a 1100-bed university hospital in Rome, where an Infectious Disease Consultancy Unit (Unità di Consulenza Infettivologica, UDCI) is available, were re-evaluated at the bedside 72 h after starting antimicrobial therapy and compared to two pre-intervention periods: the UDCI was called by the ward physician for patients with BSI and the UDCI was called directly by the microbiologist immediately after a pathogen was isolated from blood cultures. Recommendations for antibiotic de-escalation or discontinuation significantly increased (54%) from the two pre-intervention periods (32% and 27.2%, p  
ISSN:0934-9723
1435-4373
DOI:10.1007/s10096-017-3117-2