310 likes | 492 Views
New Antibiotic guidelines April 2013. Dr Fiona Donald Consultant Microbiologist Nottingham. Outline of talk. New antibiotic guidelines, summary of changes Update on antimicrobial resistance A bit about Microbiology. Antimicrobial guidelines – Why?.
E N D
New Antibiotic guidelinesApril 2013 Dr Fiona Donald Consultant Microbiologist Nottingham
Outline of talk • New antibiotic guidelines, summary of changes • Update on antimicrobial resistance • A bit about Microbiology
Antimicrobial guidelines – Why? • Simple, informed decision approach to prescribing • Evidence based and using knowledge of local resistance rates and target organisms • Saves money? • Rational use of antibiotics leads to less antibiotic resistance and fewer side effects • Educational tool • Fewer phone calls to Microbiology
Changes to guidelines - overview • Updates to national guidance eg from HPA, CKS, SIGN and NICE • Aim to reduce use of agents which will induce C difficile disease ie cephalosporins and quinolones • Shorter courses are now recommended for some conditions • Trying to stay ahead of resistant organisms
Changes to guidelines 2013 • New sections on: • Dental abscess • Diverticulitis • Additional antibiotics for multi-resistant UTIs • Linezolid added as amber 2 agent • Mastitis and breast abscess • Gonorrhoea
Changes to guidelines 2013 • Updates on: • Community acquired pneumonia – add clarithromycin to amoxicillin • Whooping cough • Pelvic inflammatory disease/gonorrhoea – IM ceftriaxone, not cefixime • MRSA treatment and decolonisation • Meningococcal prophylaxis, ciprofloxacin now recommended • Shingles age to consider treatment now 50 yrs
Use of antibiotics • Antibiotics are essential to modern medicine but their abuse leads to resistance. • A single course of antibiotics in primary care leads to bacterial resistance to that antibiotic (BMJ 18th May 2010). • All staff who prescribe have a responsibility to their patients and for public health to prescribe optimally
Antibiotic side effects • Many • Skin, GI, CNS, drug interactions • Clostridium difficile infection • Cephalosporins, penicillins, quinolones, macrolides • Colonisation/infection with resistant bugs • MRSA • ESBL coliforms (NDM) • Candida (thrush)
Antibiotic Resistance • Has been called one of the worlds most pressing public health problems • In the US the annual cost of treating infections caused by just 6 types of multi-resistant bacteria exceeded the yearly cost of treating influenza • November 2009 EU/USA summit announced a task force to deal with the problem (BMJ 22nd May 2010) • Goal of developing 10 new antibiotics by 2020 (10 x 20 initiative, IDSA)
Local resistance patterns But remember sampling bias
Local resistance patterns Bur remember sampling bias
Local resistance patterns But remember sampling bias
What can be done? • Rationalisation of prescribing of antibiotics in hospital and the community, use of guidelines • Good infection control practices • Education of the public • Rationalisation of the veterinary usage of antimicrobials, banning of antimicrobial growth promoters • Prevention of disease e.g. vaccination • Development of new antimicrobials or other drugs to beat bacteria
Antibiotic Resistant Superbugs • ESBL producing coliforms • Most often seen in community urine samples • Cause of UTI and sepsis • Only one reliable antibiotic available to treat infections, IV meropenem • Hardly any oral options • New strain NDM-1even more resistant
ESBL E.coli laboratory data • 2008/09: • 551 urines positive with ESBL E coli • 257 NUH • 294 GP/community • 49 blood cultures (vs 469 non- ESBL E coli) • Currently around 9% of community acquired E coli bacteraemias are multi-resistant
New UTI antibiotics • Fosfomycin and • Pivmecillinam (a type of penicillin) • Classified as Amber 2 agents • May be prescribed on the advice of a Medical Microbiologist • Used for oral treatment of multi-resistant UTI when no other oral option available
Diagnosis of UTI • Uncomplicated UTI in community – no need to send sample. • Send sample if no response to short course of first line treatment • If complicated UTI (eg pregnancy, loin pain, fever, catheter) send sample before treatment
Urine culture in men and women >65 years • Asymptomatic bacteriuria is common – one third of >65 yrs • Do not send for culture on the basis of a positive urine dip unless symptomatic • Do not treat asymptomatic bacteriuria, it does not reduce symptomatic episodes or mortality but does increase side effects and resistance rates
Urine culture in people with long-term catheters • Urine dipsticks are NOT useful, as catheters will normally become colonised with bacteria • Do not send urine for culture unless there are symptoms of infection • Do not treat asymptomatic bacteriuria in the presence of a catheter • Do not routinely give antibiotic prophylaxis for catheter changes
Clinical microbiology service • Based at QMC A floor West Block • All samples come here approx 800,000 per year • One third from GPs, two thirds from acute trusts • Sample processing and reporting carried out by biomedical scientists • Medical microbiologists provide the clinical leadership and interaction with clinicians
Gram-stain Gram-positive cocci Gram-negative cocci Gram-positive bacilli Gram-negative bacilli
Role of Clinical Microbiology • Diagnose infections • From samples sent to us • By clinical discussion and seeing patients • Provide results on specimens • Electronically reported • Selected results are telephoned • Generate a discussion about a patient
Role of Clinical Microbiology • Surveillance • Data provided to local infection prevention and control teams • Locally to HPU and CCDC - particularly notifiable diseases • Nationally to HPA, CDSC, DH • Advice on diagnosis and treatment of infections
Further information • Full guideline available at www.nottsapc.nhs.uk • Microbiology website at NUH www.nuh.nhs.uk/healthcare-professionals/microbiology/ • NUH antibiotic guidelines www.nuh.nhs.uk/nch/antibiotics/ • Health Protection Agency/ (now Public Health England) website www.hpa.org.uk