Implementation of a 24-hour infection diagnosis protocol in the pediatric cardiac intensive care unit (CICU)

Objectives:To reduce unnecessary antibiotic exposure in a pediatric cardiac intensive care unit (CICU).Design:Single-center, quality improvement initiative. Monthly antibiotic utilization rates were compared between 12-month baseline and 18-month intervention periods.Setting:A 25-bed pediatric CICU....

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Veröffentlicht in:Infection control and hospital epidemiology 2023-08, Vol.44 (8), p.1300-1307
Hauptverfasser: Chitalia, Reema A., Benscoter, Alexis L., Chlebowski, Meghan M., Hart, Kelsey J, Iliopoulos, Ilias, Misfeldt, Andrew M., Sawyer, Jaclyn E., Alten, Jeffrey A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives:To reduce unnecessary antibiotic exposure in a pediatric cardiac intensive care unit (CICU).Design:Single-center, quality improvement initiative. Monthly antibiotic utilization rates were compared between 12-month baseline and 18-month intervention periods.Setting:A 25-bed pediatric CICU.Patients:Clinically stable patients undergoing infection diagnosis were included. Patients with immunodeficiency, mechanical circulatory support, open sternum, and recent culture-positive infection were excluded.Interventions:The key drivers for improvement were standardizing the infection diagnosis process, order-set creation, limitation of initial antibiotic prescription to 24 hours, discouraging indiscriminate vancomycin use, and improving bedside communication and situational awareness regarding the infection diagnosis protocol.Results:In total, 109 patients received the protocol; antibiotics were discontinued in 24 hours in 72 cases (66%). The most common reasons for continuing antibiotics beyond 24 hours were positive culture (n = 13) and provider preference (n = 13). A statistical process control analysis showed only a trend in monthly mean antibiotic utilization rate in the intervention period compared to the baseline period: 32.6% (SD, 6.1%) antibiotic utilization rate during the intervention period versus 36.6% (SD, 5.4%) during the baseline period (mean difference, 4%; 95% CI, −0.5% to −8.5%; P = .07). However, a special-cause variation represented a 26% reduction in mean monthly vancomycin use during the intervention period. In the patients who had antibiotics discontinued at 24 hours, delayed culture positivity was rare.Conclusions:Implementation of a protocol limiting empiric antibiotic courses to 24 hours in clinically stable, standard-risk, pediatric CICU patients with negative cultures is feasible. This practice appears safe and may reduce harm by decreasing unnecessary antibiotic exposure.
ISSN:0899-823X
1559-6834
DOI:10.1017/ice.2022.265