Monitoring community antibiotic consumption in Belgium: reimbursement versus retail data (2013-22).

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Elena Damian, Laura Bonacini, Moira Kelly, El Maati Allaoui, Charline Maertens De Noordhout, Samuel Coenen, Ivo Deckers, Sarah De Clercq, Marc De Falleur, Ann Versporten, Boudewijn Catry, Lucy Catteau
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and objectives: In Belgium, monitoring antibiotic consumption relies on reimbursement data, which is obtained with a time delay and does not account for over-the-counter or nonreimbursed products. This study aims to bridge this gap by comparing reimbursement and retail data for primary care to understand variations and assess the accuracy of current surveillance methods.

Method: Reimbursement data were obtained from the National Institute for Health and Disability Insurance, and retail data were obtained from IQVIA for the period 2013-22. The community consumption of systemic antibiotics was expressed in defined daily doses (DDD-WHO ATC/DDD Index 2023) per inhabitants per day (DID). Relative differences in DID (RDs) based on the two data sets were computed and validated through Bland-Altman plots and correlation analysis.

Results: The sales of antibiotics declined from 22.89 DID (2013) to 20.50 (2022), with a steep drop during the COVID-19 pandemic-from 21.31 DID in 2019 to 16.55 DID in 2020-and a subsequent rebound. Reimbursement data slightly underestimated consumption compared to retail data, with RDs ranging from 2% (2013) to 9% (2022) when including quinolones and from 2% to 4% when excluding them. Bland-Altman plots showed high agreement between reimbursement and retail estimates, identifying quinolones as outliers.

Conclusion: Our findings suggest that reimbursement data are generally reliable for monitoring antibiotic consumption, but incorporating retail data is crucial for accurate assessments. The use of retail data can facilitate timely interventions and inform public health strategies to effectively address antimicrobial resistance.

监测比利时社区抗生素使用情况:报销数据与零售数据(2013-22 年)。
背景和目的:在比利时,对抗生素消耗量的监测依赖于报销数据,而报销数据的获取存在时间延迟,且不包括非处方药或无报销产品。本研究旨在通过比较基层医疗机构的报销数据和零售数据来了解差异并评估当前监测方法的准确性,从而弥补这一不足:方法:从国家健康和伤残保险研究所获得报销数据,从 IQVIA 获得 2013-22 年期间的零售数据。社区居民全身用抗生素的消耗量以每人每天的定义日剂量(DDD-WHO ATC/DDD Index 2023)表示。通过布兰-阿尔特曼图和相关性分析,计算并验证了基于两组数据的 DID 相对差异(RDs):抗生素的销售额从 22.89 DID(2013 年)下降到 20.50 DID(2022 年),在 COVID-19 大流行期间急剧下降,从 2019 年的 21.31 DID 降到 2020 年的 16.55 DID,随后又出现反弹。与零售数据相比,报销数据略微低估了用药量,如果包括喹诺酮类药物,报销率从2%(2013年)到9%(2022年)不等;如果不包括喹诺酮类药物,报销率从2%到4%不等。Bland-Altman图显示,报销和零售估算值高度一致,并将喹诺酮类药物列为异常值:我们的研究结果表明,报销数据在监测抗生素消费方面总体上是可靠的,但纳入零售数据对于准确评估至关重要。零售数据的使用有助于及时采取干预措施,并为有效解决抗菌药耐药性问题的公共卫生战略提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
5.80%
发文量
423
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal publishes articles that further knowledge and advance the science and application of antimicrobial chemotherapy with antibiotics and antifungal, antiviral and antiprotozoal agents. The Journal publishes primarily in human medicine, and articles in veterinary medicine likely to have an impact on global health.
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