Abstract
Antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) program aims to optimise antimicrobial utilisation and curb antimicrobial resistance. We investigated the clinical impact of AMS among patients with carbapenem in medical wards of a tertiary hospital. A retrospective cohort study was conducted on hospitalised adult patients treated with carbapenem and reviewed by a multidisciplinary AMS team. We compared the clinical outcomes of accepted (n = 103) and not-accepted AMS intervention cases (n = 37). The outcomes evaluated include trends of total white blood cells (TWBC), C-reactive protein (CRP), body temperature at day-7, and clinical status at day-30 post-AMS intervention. The interventions included discontinuation (50%), de-escalation (47.9%) and escalation (2.1%) of antibiotics, where the acceptance rate was 67.1%, 80.6% and 66.7%, respectively. Overall, we found no significant difference in clinical outcomes between accepted and not-accepted AMS interventions at day-7 and day-30 post-interventions. On day-7, 62.0% of patients in the accepted group showed decreased or normalised TWBC and CRP levels compared to 47.4% of the not-accepted group (p = 0.271). The mortality at day-30 (32% versus 35%, p = 0.73), discharge rate (53.4% versus 45.9%, p = 0.437), and median length of hospital stay (36.0 versus 30.0days, p = 0.526) between the groups were comparable. The predictors of 30-day mortality in the study subjects were Charlson Comorbidity Index > 3 (OR: 2.84, 95% CI 1.28-6.29, p = 0.010) and being febrile at day-7 (OR: 4.58, 95% CI 1.83-11.5, p = 0.001). AMS interventions do not result in significant adverse clinical impact and mortality risk.
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