Abstract

BackgroundStudies have demonstrated the link between antimicrobial consumption and the development of antimicrobial resistance. Surveillance of antimicrobial consumption is an action point of the European Commission’s ‘One Health Action Plan Against Antimicrobial Resistance’.AimThis study aims to compare two methodologies for antibiotic consumption surveillance, investigate the 14-year evolution of antibiotic consumption in Belgian acute care hospitals and discuss future perspectives.MethodsWe compared self-reported data (old methodology) and reimbursement data (new methodology) of national antibiotic consumption surveillance in hospitals. Descriptive analyses were performed on the reimbursement data collected per year and per trimester (2003–2016), per hospital and per unit. Antibiotic consumption was compared with European Surveillance of Antimicrobial Consumption Network (ESAC-Net) results.ResultsThe median differences for defined daily doses (DDDs)/1,000 patient days and DDDs/1,000 admissions were 3.09% and 3.94% when comparing the old vs new methodology. Based on reimbursement data, the median antibiotic consumption in 2016 in 102 Belgian acute care hospitals was 577.1 DDDs/1,000 patient days and 3,890.3 DDDs/1,000 admissions with high variation between hospitals (interquartile ranges (IQR): 511.3–655.0 and 3,450.0–4,400.5, respectively), and similar to 2015. Based on DDDs/1,000 patient days, the magnitude of consumption is comparable with the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden, but is higher when based on DDDs/1,000 admissions.ConclusionAntibiotic consumption in Belgian acute care hospitals has remained overall stable over time. However, the high variation across hospitals should be further investigated. This surveillance data could be used for benchmarking and assessing interventions to improve antibiotic consumption in these hospitals.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial resistance, which is defined as ‘the ability of a microorganism to resist the action of one or more antimicrobial agents’ [1], is a serious worldwide threat for public health

  • In the comparison of the antibiotic consumption rates per hospital and per year calculated with data from the old and new methodologies, a median difference of 3.09% in defined daily doses (DDDs)/1,000 patient days (IQR: 1.28–8.02) and a median difference of 3.94% in DDDs/1,000 admissions (IQR: 1.66–13.24) was found

  • For antibiotic consumption expressed as DDDs/1,000 patient days and DDDs/1,000 admissions a difference of more than 50% was detected for 1 or more years for 13 and 15 hospitals, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial resistance, which is defined as ‘the ability of a microorganism to resist the action of one or more antimicrobial agents’ [1], is a serious worldwide threat for public health. Aim: This study aims to compare two methodologies for antibiotic consumption surveillance, investigate the 14-year evolution of antibiotic consumption in Belgian acute care hospitals and discuss future perspectives. Methods: We compared self-reported data (old methodology) and reimbursement data (new methodology) of national antibiotic consumption surveillance in hospitals. Results: The median differences for defined daily doses (DDDs)/1,000 patient days and DDDs/1,000 admissions were 3.09% and 3.94% when comparing the old vs new methodology. The median antibiotic consumption in 2016 in 102 Belgian acute care hospitals was 577.1 DDDs/1,000 patient days and 3,890.3 DDDs/1,000 admissions with high variation between hospitals (interquartile ranges (IQR): 511.3–655.0 and 3,450.0–4,400.5, respectively), and similar to 2015. The high variation across hospitals should be further investigated This surveillance data could be used for benchmarking and assessing interventions to improve antibiotic consumption in these hospitals

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