Abstract

BackgroundPoint prevalence surveys have been used in several studies to provide immediate and easily comparable information about antibiotic use and showed that about one third of hospitalised children had on ongoing antimicrobial prescription during their hospital admission. The aim of this study, as part of the Global Antimicrobial Resistance, Prescribing and Efficacy in Neonates and Children project, is to describe antimicrobial prescriptions among hospitalised children in four tertiary care hospitals in Italy to show if something has changed over the years.MethodsFour tertiary care Italian’s hospitals joined three Point Prevalence Surveys (PPSs) in three different period of the year. All children under 18 years of age with an ongoing antimicrobial prescription, admitted on the participating wards at 8 o’clock in the morning of the selecting day were enrolled.ResultsA total of 1412 patients (475 neonates and 937 children) were admitted in the days of three PPSs. Overall, among the total admitted patients, 565 patients (40%) had an ongoing antimicrobial prescription in the days of the survey A total of 718 antibiotics were administered in the 485 admitted children and 133 in neonates. The most common indications for antibiotic therapy in children was Lower respiratory tract infections (244/718, 34%), while in neonates were prophylaxis for medical problems (35/133, 26.3%), newborn prophylaxis for newborn risk factors (29/133, 21.8%) and prophylaxis for surgical disease (15/133, 11.3%).ConclusionsBased on our results, it appears that nothing has changed since the last PPS and that the quality improved targets, underlyined in previous studies, are always the same. Serial PPSs can be part of AMS strategies but they are not sufficient alone to produce changes in clinical practice.

Highlights

  • Point prevalence surveys have been used in several studies to provide immediate and comparable information about antibiotic use and showed that about one third of hospitalised children had on ongoing antimicrobial prescription during their hospital admission

  • Several studies have demonstrated that antimicrobial resistance (AMR) development is related to broad spectrum antimicrobial use and that the optimization of AM prescriptions is a key point of antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) [2]

  • Antibiotics prescribed in children A total of 718 antibiotics were administered in children with no significant differences between three Point Prevalence Surveys (PPSs) (p = 0.199)

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Summary

Introduction

Point prevalence surveys have been used in several studies to provide immediate and comparable information about antibiotic use and showed that about one third of hospitalised children had on ongoing antimicrobial prescription during their hospital admission. The aim of this study, as part of the Global Antimicrobial Resistance, Prescribing and Efficacy in Neonates and Children project, is to describe antimicrobial prescriptions among hospitalised children in four tertiary care hospitals in Italy to show if something has changed over the years. Repeated Point Prevalence Surveys (PPSs), conducted in several European and nonEuropean countries, demonstrate high broad spectrum antibiotic use in hospitals [3,4,5,6]. The aim of this study, as part of the Global Antimicrobial Resistance, Prescribing and Efficacy in Neonates and Children (GARPEC) project, was to compare antimicrobial prescriptions among hospitalised children in four tertiary care hospitals in Italy using the same methodology from previous pediatric PPS’s, to investigate if previous PPS studies had led to any change in clinical prescribing practice

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