在巴基斯坦的一个癌症中心检查治疗指南对门诊抗生素处方趋势的影响。

Antimicrobial stewardship & healthcare epidemiology : ASHE Pub Date : 2025-02-20 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1017/ash.2025.2
Salma Abbas, Seemal Aslam, Sara Batool, Mahnoor Zafar, Sadia Khaliq, Momal Fatima, Iraj Shehzad, Muhammad Arslan, Iqra Attiq, Muhammad Shehbaz, Anum Khan, Muhammad Ali Raza, Hamza Zulfiqar, Ahsan Mahmood, Faisal Sultan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:评估治疗指南对巴基斯坦某癌症中心儿童和成人患者门诊抗生素处方趋势的影响。设计:回顾性观察研究于2018年7月1日至2023年7月31日进行。方法:对上呼吸道感染(URTI)、下呼吸道感染(LRTI)、尿路感染(UTI)和腹泻的抗菌药物适应证及处方不一致的频次进行分析。采用χ2检验评估治疗指南对这些适应症的抗生素处方的影响。结果:抗菌药物处方的主要适应症为皮肤及皮肤结构感染(SSSI) (n = 5159;21.5%),尿路感染(n = 2760;11.5%)和UTI (n = 2686;11.2%)。阿莫西林-克拉维酸酯(n = 7964;33.3%),是最常开的抗生素。很大一部分用于尿路感染、腹泻、尿路感染和下尿路感染的抗生素处方不合适(n = 6695;86.5%)或不必要(n = 5534;71.5%)。结果显示,尿路感染不适宜抗生素比例下降有统计学意义(91.3% vs 84.0%;P≤0.001)和腹泻(92.6% vs 87.0%;P = 0.031)和不必要的腹泻抗生素(90.2% vs 83.2%;P = .016)。我们注意到LRTI的不必要处方比例更高(41.7% vs 31.7%;P = 0.003)和抗生素使用不当(95.1% vs 87.4%;P = .011)。结论:门诊滥用抗生素现象普遍。腹泻、尿路感染、尿路感染和下尿路感染是门诊肿瘤学重点处方医生教育和管理干预的高优先级条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Examining the impact of treatment guidelines on outpatient antibiotic prescription trends at a cancer center in Pakistan.

Objective: To assess the impact of treatment guidelines on the trends of outpatient antibiotic prescription among pediatric and adult patients at a cancer center in Pakistan.

Design: Retrospective observational study conducted between July 1st 2018 and July 31st 2023.

Methods: We determined the indication for antibiotics and the frequency of guideline-discordant prescriptions for upper respiratory tract infection (URTI), lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), urinary tract infection (UTI), and diarrhea. The χ2 test was used to assess the impact of treatment guidelines on antibiotics prescribed for these indications.

Results: The top indications for antibiotic prescription were skin and skin structure infection (SSSI) (n = 5159; 21.5%), URTI (n = 2760; 11.5%) and UTI (n = 2686; 11.2%). Amoxicillin-clavulanate (n = 7964; 33.3%), was the most frequently prescribed antibiotic. A large proportion of antibiotic prescriptions for URTI, diarrhea, UTI, and LRTI were either inappropriate (n = 6695; 86.5%) or unnecessary (n = 5534; 71.5%). Results revealed a statistically significant decline in the proportion of inappropriate antibiotics for UTI (91.3% vs 84.0%; P ≤ .001) and diarrhea (92.6% vs 87.0%; P = .031) and unnecessary antibiotics for diarrhea (90.2% vs 83.2%; P = .016) with the introduction of treatment guidelines. We noted a higher proportion of unnecessary prescriptions for LRTI (41.7% vs 31.7%; P = .003) and inappropriate antibiotics for UTI (95.1% vs 87.4%; P = .011) for pediatric patients.

Conclusion: Misuse of outpatient antibiotics is common. Diarrhea, URTI, UTI, and LRTI are high-priority conditions for outpatient oncology-focused prescriber education and stewardship interventions.

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