患有 COVID-19 并伴有和不伴有败血症症状的住院患者使用抗生素的趋势。

Claire N Shappell, Michael Klompas, Christina Chan, Tom Chen, Chanu Rhee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的评估住院的 COVID-19 败血症和非败血症患者的抗生素处方趋势:设计:使用电子健康记录(EHR)数据进行回顾性队列研究:地点:马萨诸塞州东部的五家医院:患者:2020 年 3 月至 2022 年 11 月期间因社区感染 SARS-CoV-2 而住院的成年人(≥18 岁):我们评估了COVID-19患者中使用长期初始抗生素治疗(入院一周内抗生素使用天数≥4天,包括出院抗生素)的季度趋势。采用泊松回归模型对基线特征和病情严重程度进行调整:在研究期间住院的 431,017 人中,21,563 人(5.0%)患有社区型 COVID-19。4,769/21,563人(20.5%)出现败血症。尽管入院时细菌培养阳性率较低(分别为 15.0% 和 6.3%),但仍有 2,323/4,769 名(48.7%)COVID-19 败血症患者和 2,866/16,794 名(17.1%)非败血症患者被处方长期抗生素。脓毒症组(66.8% 对 43.9%)和无脓毒症组(31.8% 对 24.4%)的长期抗生素使用率在第一季度和第二季度之间都有所下降。然而,此后到 2022 年 11 月,两组的情况均无明显变化(季度 aOR 分别为 1.02,95% CI 0.99-1.05 和 1.01,95% CI 0.99-1.03):尽管细菌感染率较低,但在大流行的前 33 个月中,住院的 COVID-19 败血症患者和非败血症患者都会长期使用抗生素。抗生素使用量的减少主要发生在大流行的第一和第二季度,此后没有进一步减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trends in antibiotic utilization for patients hospitalized with COVID-19 with and without signs of sepsis.

Objective: To assess trends in antibiotic prescribing for patients hospitalized with COVID-19 with and without sepsis.

Design: Retrospective cohort study using electronic health record (EHR) data.

Setting: Five hospitals in eastern Massachusetts.

Patients: Adults (≥18 years) hospitalized with community-onset SARS-CoV-2 infections between March 2020 and November 2022.

Methods: We assessed quarterly trends in the use of prolonged initial antibiotic therapy (≥4 antibiotic days within one week of admission, including discharge antibiotics) amongst COVID-19 patients with and without sepsis, defined using clinical signs of organ dysfunction before hospital day 3. Poisson regression models were used to adjust for baseline characteristics and severity of illness.

Results: Of 431,017 hospitalizations in the study period, 21,563 (5.0%) had community-onset COVID-19. 4,769/21,563 (20.5%) presented with sepsis. Prolonged antibiotics were prescribed in 2,323/4,769 (48.7%) COVID-19 patients with sepsis and 2,866/16,794 (17.1%) without sepsis despite low rates of positive bacterial cultures on admission (15.0% vs 6.3%, respectively). Quarterly rates of prolonged antibiotics declined between the first and second pandemic quarters for both sepsis (66.8% to 43.9%) and no-sepsis (31.8% to 24.4%) groups. However, there was no significant change thereafter through November 2022 in either group (quarterly aORs 1.02, 95% CI 0.99-1.05 and 1.01, 95% CI 0.99-1.03, respectively).

Conclusions: Prolonged antibiotics were common in hospitalized COVID-19 patients with and without sepsis during the first 33 months of the pandemic despite low rates of proven bacterial infection. Decreases in antibiotic utilization occurred primarily between the first and second pandemic quarter with no further reduction thereafter.

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