Feasibility of Core Antimicrobial Stewardship Interventions in Community Hospitals

Publication Description
IMPORTANCE: The feasibility of core Infectious Diseases Society of America–recommended antimicrobial stewardship interventions in community hospitals is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To determine the feasibility and results of implementing 2 core stewardship intervention strategies in community hospitals. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Three-stage, multicenter, prospective nonrandomized clinical trial with crossover design. The setting was 4 community hospitals in North Carolina (median bed size, 305; range, 102-425). Participants were all patients receiving targeted study antibacterial agents or alternative, nonstudy antibacterial agents. The study dates were October 2014 through October 2015. All statistical analyses were completed as of October 2016. INTERVENTIONS: Two antimicrobial stewardship strategies targeted vancomycin hydrochloride, piperacillin-tazobactam, and the antipseudomonal carbapenems on formulary at the study hospitals: (1) modified preauthorization (PA), in which the prescriber had to receive pharmacist approval for continued use of the antibiotic after the first dose, and (2) postprescription audit and review (PPR), in which the pharmacist would engage the prescriber about antibiotic appropriateness after 72 hours of therapy. Two hospitals performed modified PA for 6 months, then PPR for 6 months after a 1-month washout. The other 2 hospitals performed the reverse. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was the feasibility of implementing the interventions, determined by (1) approval by hospital administration and committees at each study hospital; (2) completion of pharmacist training; (3) initiation and implementation as determined by number, type, and outcomes of interventions performed; and (4) time required for interventions. Secondary outcomes included antimicrobial use (days of therapy) compared with matched historical periods and length of hospitalization. RESULTS: A total of 2692 patients (median age, 65 years; interquartile range, 53-76 years) underwent a study intervention; 1413 (52.5%) were female, 1323 (49.1%) were white, and 1047 (38.9%) were African American. Intervention approvals took a median of 95 days (range, 56-119 days); during these discussions, strict PA was deemed not feasible. Instead, the modified PA intervention was used throughout the study. Pharmacists performed 1456 modified PA interventions (median per hospital, 350 [range, 129-628]) and 1236 PPR interventions (median per hospital, 298 [range, 273-366]). Study antimicrobials were determined to be inappropriate 2 times as often during the PPR period (41.0% [435 of 1060] vs 20.4% [253 of 1243]; P 

Primary Author
Anderson,Deverick J.
Watson,Shera
Moehring,Rebekah W.
Komarow,Lauren
Finnemeyer,Matthew
Arias,Rebekka M.
Huvane,Jacqueline
Bova Hill,Carol
Deckard,Nancie
Sexton,Daniel J.

Volume
2

Issue
8

Other Pages
e199369

Publisher
American Medical Association

URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.9369

PMID
31418804



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
JAMA Network Open

Publication Year
2019

Publication Date
Aug 2,

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
2574-3805

Document Object Index
10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.9369