针对长期护理机构中的尿路感染实施抗菌药物管理计划:集群控制干预研究

Elisabeth König, Lisa Kriegl, Christian Pux, Michael Uhlmann, Walter Schippinger, Alexander Avian, Robert Krause, Ines Zollner-Schwetz
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摘要

抗菌药物的广泛不当使用导致了全球范围内抗药性的产生。在长期护理机构(LTCF)中,抗生素是最常用的处方药之一。在 LTCF 开出的抗菌药物处方中,有三分之一以上是用于治疗尿路感染(UTI)的。我们的目标是采用多方面的抗菌药物管理干预措施,增加 LTCF 中尿路感染的适当抗菌药物治疗次数。我们进行了一项非随机分组对照干预研究。格拉茨老年健康中心的四家 LTCF 为干预组,四家 LTCF 为对照组。干预措施的主要内容包括:对初级保健医生进行自愿继续医学教育、分发书面指南、在项目主页上发布指南和视频以及对护理人员进行现场培训。当地护理人员在在线病例报告平台上记录尿毒症发病数据。两名盲审员对治疗是否充分进行评估。共记录了 326 例尿毒症病例,其中干预组 161 例,对照组 165 例。在干预期间,治疗指征不足的风险比为 0.41(95% CI 0.19-0.90),p = 0.025。在干预组中,选择适当抗生素的比例从干预前的 42.1%增至干预期间的 45.9%,再增至干预后的 51%(绝对增幅为 8.9%)。对照组的比例分别为 36.4%、33.3% 和 33.3%。干预后,干预组与对照组的数字差异为 17.7%(差异未达到统计学意义)。对照组和干预组在安全性结果(临床失败的比例、因UTI入院的次数和因抗菌治疗引起的不良事件)方面没有明显差异。抗菌药物管理计划包括实践指南、针对护理人员和全科医生的本地和网络教育,因此在干预期间,充分治疗(就治疗尿毒症的决定而言)的比例显著增加。然而,这种差异在干预后阶段并没有得到保持。有必要继续努力,进一步提高处方质量。该试验已在 ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04798365 上注册。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Implementation of an antimicrobial stewardship program for urinary tract infections in long-term care facilities: a cluster-controlled intervention study
Widespread inappropriate use of antimicrobial substances drives resistance development worldwide. In long-term care facilities (LTCF), antibiotics are among the most frequently prescribed medications. More than one third of antimicrobial agents prescribed in LTCFs are for urinary tract infections (UTI). We aimed to increase the number of appropriate antimicrobial treatments for UTIs in LTCFs using a multi-faceted antimicrobial stewardship intervention. We performed a non-randomized cluster-controlled intervention study. Four LTCFs of the Geriatric Health Centers Graz were the intervention group, four LTCFs served as control group. The main components of the intervention were: voluntary continuing medical education for primary care physicians, distribution of a written guideline, implementation of the project homepage to distribute guidelines and videos and onsite training for nursing staff. Local nursing staff recorded data on UTI episodes in an online case report platform. Two blinded reviewers assessed whether treatments were adequate. 326 UTI episodes were recorded, 161 in the intervention group and 165 in the control group. During the intervention period, risk ratio for inadequate indication for treatment was 0.41 (95% CI 0.19–0.90), p = 0.025. In theintervention group, the proportion of adequate antibiotic choices increased from 42.1% in the pre-intervention period, to 45.9% during the intervention and to 51% in the post-intervention period (absolute increase of 8.9%). In the control group, the proportion was 36.4%, 33.3% and 33.3%, respectively. The numerical difference between intervention group and control group in the post-intervention period was 17.7% (difference did not reach statistical significance). There were no significant differences between the control group and intervention group in the safety outcomes (proportion of clinical failure, number of hospital admissions due to UTI and adverse events due to antimicrobial treatment). An antimicrobial stewardship program consisting of practice guidelines, local and web-based education for nursing staff and general practitioners resulted in a significant increase in adequate treatments (in terms of decision to treat the UTI) during the intervention period. However, this difference was not maintained in the post-intervention phase. Continued efforts to improve the quality of prescriptions further are necessary. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04798365.
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