Rapid laboratory diagnosis of urinary tract infection, with or without antibiotic decision support-a small pilot study investigating accuracy and clinical impact.
Einar Nilsen, Kristine Karlsrud Berg, Fabian Åhrberg, Eivor Johanne Nordstrand Jacobsen, Kasper Kavli Øvstehus, Erik Otte
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The study evaluated the accuracy and clinical impact of rapid diagnostics (RD) with or without antibiotic decision support (ADS) for hospitalized patients with urinary tract infections. A two-centre prospective intervention was conducted with 230 patients divided into three groups: RD-only (n = 59), RD plus ADS (n = 56) and a control group (n = 115). Mean laboratory turnaround time for RD was 10 h and 50 min. Of 115 microorganisms, 108 were correctly identified. The error rate for rapid susceptibility determination was 0.85%. Total antibiotic consumption, measured in defined daily doses (DDD), was lower in the intervention groups compared to the control group (ADS: 10.3 DDD, p = 0.01; RD: 10.9 DDD, p = 0.06; control: 13.0 DDD). No significant differences were observed in the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics (p = 0.816). Adherence to antibiotic guidelines was significantly better in the ADS group compared to the control group (p = 0.015) (RD vs control; p = 0.261). The ADS group also received fewer doses of ineffective antibiotics (ADS: 1.8 doses, p = 0.012; RD: 2.4 doses, p = 0.195; control: 3.4 doses). Length of hospital and ICU stays or 30-day readmission rates did not differ across groups. No in-hospital mortality was observed in any group.
期刊介绍:
APMIS, formerly Acta Pathologica, Microbiologica et Immunologica Scandinavica, has been published since 1924 by the Scandinavian Societies for Medical Microbiology and Pathology as a non-profit-making scientific journal.