Abstract

BackgroundAudit and feedback programs are considered to be one of the most effective antimicrobial stewardship (ASP) strategies to improve antibiotic prescribing; however, resource requirements are a limiting factor.MethodsIn a controlled, quasi-experimental study we evaluated the impact of once weekly ASP rounds conducted with one Medicine teaching team, while two Medicine teams served as controls, at a tertiary care center from November 2014 until November 2015. We assessed process measures and changes in antibiotic utilization (reported as monthly defined daily doses per 1000 patient days from November 2013 to November 2015 using statistical process control charts).ResultsIn total, 249 patients (40% of 627 patients on the team) were on anti-infectives on the day of the rounds and had been discussed, of which 18% (48/249) were already followed by infectious diseases. A total of 79 interventions were made. Reduced duration of therapy comprised over half of the recommendations (39/76, 51%). Discontinuing antibiotics on the same day was the second most common intervention (20/76, 26%). All stewardship suggestions were accepted by the Medicine team. However, no significant changes in antibiotic utilization were observed with a similar reduction in both groups for piperacillin-tazobactam and meropenem while at the same time, an increased use of first and third-generation cephalosporins was observed.ConclusionWhile the process measures demonstrated a change in the treatment plan in 1 out of 3 patients reviewed, this did not translate into a significant change in antibiotic utilization as compared with the control groups. This may be related to the comparably small proportion of patients reviewed by ASP given that rounds occurred only once a week, and were cancelled 28 times within a one year period due to limited Medicine clinician availability. There also could have been cross-contamination between the two study arms with faculty and trainees who received the intervention while on the intervention team continuing their learned practice while on a control team. Process measures are an important means to measure the impact of ASPs, as antibiotic utilization is not a sensitive metric and may not reliably reflect improvement in antibiotic management at the individual patient level.Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.

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