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Agenda. BasicsSpecificsPhysician/administration acceptancePhysician responseMeasurement/reportingCost implicationsClinical vignettes and user friendly recommendations. Goal. Condense clinical infectious disease ad absurdumCreate mini-ID specialists, by recipe. What is Antibiotic Stewardship?
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1. Antibiotic Stewardship C.G. Wlodaver, M.D.
2. Agenda Basics
Specifics
Physician/administration acceptance
Physician response
Measurement/reporting
Cost implications
Clinical vignettes and user friendly recommendations
3. Goal Condense clinical infectious disease ad absurdum
Create mini-ID specialists, by recipe
4. What is Antibiotic Stewardship? A program that encourages judicious (vs injudicious) use of antibiotics
Antibiotics are relatively so effective, non-toxic and inexpensive…so easy to use…that they are prone to abuse
When the diagnosis is uncertain, antibiotics are often prescribed…
Stewardship strives to fine tune antibiotic Rx in regards to
Efficacy
Toxicity
Resistance-induction
C. difficile-induction
Cost
Discontinuation
5. How does it relate to MRSA? Resistance-induction: MRSA and other MDRSs
Darwinism
Flemming
Weinstein, L
Native American wisdom
Efficacy
Some prescribers are still in the MSSA era
6. What are its limitations? It’s difficult/dangerous… to practice clinical infectious diseases with limited information
Select cases very carefully
Primum non nocere
7. Does it work? Data…………….
8. Recommended by Collaborative
Drs. Perl, Bratzler, CW
IDSA
Practiced regularly
9. How does it work? A pharmacist, par excellence, or someone else… reviews patients on antibiotics and makes recommendations, prn; overseen by ID-trained physician, when available.
Training…
Physician contacted
Telephone call…
Notation in chart…
Rx change written
Pharmacist, verbal order
Physician
10. Common InterventionsSome are so evident that they should be automatic Allergy
Efficacy
Empiric, vs MRSA
Based on culture and sensitivity
Dosing
Cefazolin, q8h
Ceftriaxone, q24h
Levels
Vancomycin…
Aminoglycosides…
Vaccines: influenza, pneumococcal, Hep B… Vaccines: influenza, pneumococcal, Hep B…
11. IV-to-po switch
Criteria
Afebrile
WBC normalized
Oral bio-availability, e.g. quinolones……….
Intact GI tract
Patient can often go home on po without further in-hospital observation……..
12. Redundancy
E.g. Unasyn or Zosyn + Flagyl…
13. When to discontinue antibiotics altogether! Asymtomatic UTI
Viral URI
Exacerbation of COPD???
CHF misdiagnosed as pneumonia
CoNS bacteremia, when contamination more likely than true infection
Duration: criteria to d/c
14. Asymtomatic UTI Definition: pyuria/bacteriuria, without Sx, e.g. temperature and WBC WNL
Common
Data…………
15. Viral URI How do you know it’s viral and not bacterial?
16. Exacerbation of COPD How do you know if it’s bacterial?
……..
Antibiotics not unreasonable.
5 days should suffice…
17. CHF misdiagnosed as pneumonia How do you distinguish one from the other?
H&P, temperature, WBC, CXR, BNP, cultures (sputum and blood), pneumococcal urine antigen……
If antibiotics started and continued, 5 days should suffice
18. CoNS bacteremia How do you know if it’s real or contamination?
Real
Hospitalized, IV (phlebitis), fever, leukocytosis, multiple positive cultures
Contamination
Present on admission/no IV, no fever, no leukocytosis, few positive cultures/denominator
19. Duration: Criteria to d/c antibiotics Evidence-based
Infectious endocarditis, osteomyelitis…
(Don’t streamline!)
20. Uncomplicated UTI
21. Community-acquired pneumonia
22. Hospital-acquired pneumonia
23. Empiric discontinuation
Once temperature and WBC have normalized
24. Additional recommendations SCIP
C.difficile
Pneumonia
MRSA furunculosis
Therapeutic substitutions
25. SCIP Antibiotic prophylaxis
Which agent?
Function of most common pathogen(s)
Staph. aureus
First generation cephalosporin
If PCN-allergic…
If high prevalence of MRSA…
Anaerobes
Cefoxitin
When to start?
1 hour pre-op…………….
When to stop?
1 dose only
Within 24 hours
26. Clostridium difficile Use guidelines…..
27. Community-acquired pneumonia Use guidelines
28. MRSA furunculosis I&D may suffice, without antibiotics…
29. Therapeutic Substitutions Quinolones
Cephalosporins
30. Physician/administration Acceptance Medical Executive Committee approval!
Letter to physicians
CW……………….
31. Physician Response Bell-shaped curve……
Dr. S
Dr. D
Antibiotics viewed as “drugs of fear”
Fear of omission
Law suits…
Fear of commission
Law suits…
32. Measure Interventions # patients reviewed
# physicians contacted (interventions recommended/ # patients reviewed: %
# interventions accomplished/ # recommended: %
Change to avoid allergic reaction
Drug-drug interactions addressed
Change to different antibiotic based on C&S
Changed dose
IV-to-po switch
Antibiotics discontinued altogether
33. C. difficile rate
MRSA rate
34. Bad outcomes, viz. patient suffered because of an antibiotic-deficiency
35. Reporting Measurements Hospital
P&T Committee
Infection Control Committee
Medical Executive Committee
MRSA Collaborative
Federal Agencies
JCAHO
CMS
36. Cost Implications It’s the right thing to do, regardless of cost
Antibiotic costs
Pharmacy
Administration
Personnel
Pharmacist
ID or other MD oversight
Self-perpetuating
37. BREAK
38. Vignettes
39. Asymtomatic UTI An 83 yo woman suffers from dementia and resides in a nursing home. The NH staff is concerned about her increased confusion and decides to send her to the local ER. VS: BP 140/90, P 90, RR 16, T 98.6. PE WNL except for mild confusion. No Foley. WBC 10.1. U/A 5-10 WBC/hpf. Dx: “UTI.” Rx Avelox. The following day her urine culture returns with E.coli, >100K. Avelox continued x 1 wk. She becomes more confused, develops C.diff antibiotic-associated colitis and expires.
40. Comments:
On occasion, “sepsis” can present with normal or low temperature and WBC, and with confusion… However, she wasn’t septic based on the normal BP and P…
An asymptomatic UTI does not need Rx
Avelox is not indicated for UTI.
Quinolones can cause CNS problems…
All antibiotics can cause C.diff AAC
The elderly and NH residents are predisposed
41. Antibiotic Stewardship:Asymptomatic UTI This patient appears to have an aymptomatic UTI which does not merit antibiotic Rx.
Ref:
42. Viral URI A 72 yo diabetic man developed nasal congestion and cough productive of purulent sputum. He went to his local ER where the evaluation was noteworthy for a temperature of 99.6, normal respirations, mild tenderness to palpation and percussion over his sinuses, clear lungs, a WBC of 7.8 with 6% eosinophils and CXR showing “chronic scarring.” His blood sugar was 311. He was admitted. After a sputum was obtained for C&S, he was started on Rocephin and Zithromax for “possible community-acquired pneumonia.” The sputum had >25 epithelial cells and was rejected. The symptoms persisted for another 3 days. Levaquin was added. He developed C.diff antibiotic-associated colitis which has relapsed x5.
43. Comments:
Great respect and extra attention must be given to immunocompromised hosts, e.g. diabetics.
Yet even immunocompromised hosts can catch otherwise benign, self-limiting viral URIs for which antibiotics are not indicated.
99.6 isn’t fever.
A reasonable clinical approach would be to d/c antibiotics and follow clinically, re-thinking their indication if the patient develops symptoms of a bacterial superinfection, e.g. fever.
44. Antibiotic Stewardship:Viral URI This patient appears to have a viral URI which does not merit antibiotic Rx
Ref, e.g. CDC………