日本埼玉县一家非急症护理医院抗菌药物处方点流行调查

Noriomi Ishibashi, I. Pauwels, Yuki Tomori, Yoshiaki Gu, T. Yamaguchi, Takahiro Handa, Minoru Yamaoka, Daisuke Ito, T. Sakimoto, Takuma Kimura, Kouichi Takizawa, Ryota Sato, Takahiro Sakashita, Akira Ooyama, A. Versporten, H. Goossens, N. Tarumoto, S. Maesaki, N. Tanahashi
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Information on the prescribed antimicrobials on the survey target day was obtained from the in-hospital pharmacy. Survey data were collected by physicians, based on the extracted information. Patient information was anonymized and entered in the Global-PPS Web application by physicians. We report the antimicrobial use prevalence, the indication for prescription, diagnosis, the most prescribed antimicrobials, and a set of quality indicators related to antimicrobial prescribing. Results In total, 6.7% of the surveyed inpatients (120/1796) were prescribed antimicrobials on the survey day. Sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim was the most commonly prescribed, with 20.0% of systemic antibiotic prescriptions (ATC J01). Of all antibiotics for systemic use, up to 58.4% were Watch antibiotics, as defined by the World Health Organization AWaRe classification. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

全球点流行率调查(global - pps)是监测住院患者处方抗菌药物的标准,为制定医院抗菌药物管理计划提供数据。目的评价日本埼玉县一家非急症护理医院使用通用标准化Global-PPS方案的抗菌药物处方的流行情况和质量。方法分别于2018年11月、2019年1月和2019年5月三个工作日对住院过夜患者的抗菌药物处方进行调查。调查目标日的抗菌素处方信息从院内药房获得。调查数据由医生根据提取的信息收集。患者信息被匿名化,并由医生输入到Global-PPS Web应用程序中。我们报告了抗菌素的使用情况、处方指征、诊断、最常用的抗菌素以及与抗菌素处方相关的一套质量指标。结果调查当天共有6.7%(120/1796)住院患者使用抗菌药物。磺胺甲恶唑/甲氧苄啶是最常见的抗生素处方,占全身抗生素处方的20.0% (ATC J01)。在所有系统使用的抗生素中,高达58.4%是世界卫生组织AWaRe分类定义的Watch抗生素。全体性抗生素处方最多的是非青霉素类β -内酰胺类抗生素(34.4%),其次是青霉素类抗生素联合β -内酰胺酶抑制剂(25.6%)和磺胺类药物联合甲氧苄氨嘧啶(20.8%)。医疗保健相关感染和医疗预防是最常见的适应症,分别占处方的69.3%和26.3%。全系统抗生素处方最常见的诊断是肺炎(49.6%)。67.1%的处方在病历中注明了抗菌药物处方的原因,50.3%的处方记录了停止/审查日期。合规性达到66.7%。结论:本研究强调了在高度特异性的非急性护理患者群体中与抗菌药物处方相关的重要挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Point Prevalence Surveys of Antimicrobial Prescribing in a Non-Acute Care Hospital in Saitama Prefecture, Japan
Background The global point prevalence survey (Global-PPS) is the standard for the surveillance of prescribed antimicrobials among inpatients and provides data for the development of hospital antimicrobial stewardship programs. Aim To evaluate the prevalence and quality of antimicrobial prescriptions using the universally standardized Global-PPS protocol in a non-acute care hospital in Saitama Prefecture, Japan. Methods Antimicrobial prescriptions for inpatients, staying at the hospital overnight, were surveyed on three separate week days in November 2018, January 2019, and May 2019. Information on the prescribed antimicrobials on the survey target day was obtained from the in-hospital pharmacy. Survey data were collected by physicians, based on the extracted information. Patient information was anonymized and entered in the Global-PPS Web application by physicians. We report the antimicrobial use prevalence, the indication for prescription, diagnosis, the most prescribed antimicrobials, and a set of quality indicators related to antimicrobial prescribing. Results In total, 6.7% of the surveyed inpatients (120/1796) were prescribed antimicrobials on the survey day. Sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim was the most commonly prescribed, with 20.0% of systemic antibiotic prescriptions (ATC J01). Of all antibiotics for systemic use, up to 58.4% were Watch antibiotics, as defined by the World Health Organization AWaRe classification. The most prescribed group of systemic antibiotics was non-penicillin beta-lactam antibiotics (34.4%), followed by penicillin antibiotics in combination with beta-lactamase inhibitors (25.6%), and sulfonamides with trimethoprim (20.8%). Healthcare-associated infections and medical prophylaxis were the most common indications reported in 69.3% and 26.3% of prescriptions, respectively. The most common diagnosis for systemic antibiotic prescriptions was pneumonia (49.6%). Reasons for antimicrobial prescriptions were indicated in the medical records for 67.1% of prescriptions, and the stop/review date was documented to be 50.3%. Compliance with local guidelines reached 66.7%. Conclusions This study highlights important challenges related to antimicrobial prescription in a highly specific, non-acute care patient population.
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