Abstract

Background and objectives: For proper antimicrobial therapy, cumulative antibiograms should be representative of geographic region and be accurate. Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) guidelines recommend that only the first isolates (FI) of a species per patient are used when reporting cumulative antibiograms. However, >50% of hospitals in the United States report antibiograms of all isolates. We compared antibiograms from the FI with those from total isolates (TI). Materials and Methods: Antimicrobial data of all isolates identified in the Microbiology unit of Ilsan Paik Hospital in 2019 were retrospectively acquired from the hospital information system. The susceptibility rates to antimicrobials of Escherichia coli, Acinetobacter baumannii, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecium, and Enterococcus faecalis were analyzed by FI and TI, respectively. Isolate counts and susceptibility rates of each species for the reported antimicrobials were compared. Results: The numbers of isolates by FI/TI were as follows: 1824/2692 E. coli, 480/1611 A. baumannii, and 662/1306 K. pneumoniae, and 407/953 P. aeruginosa for gram-negative bacteria and 649/1364 S. aureus, 211/313 E. faecium, and 323/394 E. faecalis for gram-positive bacteria. All antimicrobial agents showed higher susceptibility rates when calculated as FI than as TI in gram-negative bacteria except colistin: 3.7% for E. coli, 14.5% for A. baumannii, 8.3% for K. pneumoniae, and 7.9% for P. aeruginosa. In S. aureus, 8/11 antimicrobial agents revealed higher susceptibility rates for FI than for TI. E. faecalis and E. faecium showed lower susceptibility rates for 7/10 antimicrobial agents for FI than for TI. The oxacillin susceptibility rates of S. aureus were 36.6%/30.2% with FI/TI and vancomycin susceptibility rates for E. faecium were 54.1% and 49.5%, respectively. Conclusions: When comparing cumulative antibiograms by FI with TI using real-world data, there is a large gap for critical species requiring hospital infection control. Although FI calculation is difficult, antibiograms must be calculated as FI for proper preemptive antimicrobial therapy because FI provides proper antimicrobial susceptibility data.

Highlights

  • Inappropriate empirical antimicrobial therapy can lead to increased resistance to antimicrobial agents or ineffective treatment

  • The susceptibility rates to antimicrobials of Escherichia coli, Acinetobacter baumannii, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecium, and Enterococcus faecalis were analyzed by first isolates (FI) and total isolates (TI), respectively

  • Clinicians may treat patients with inappropriate empirical antimicrobial therapy using broad-spectrum antibiotic agents based on their inappropriate cumulative antibiograms, calculated based on total isolates, which can result in increased resistance to antimicrobial agents or ineffective treatment [1,2,3]

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Summary

Introduction

Inappropriate empirical antimicrobial therapy can lead to increased resistance to antimicrobial agents or ineffective treatment. A cumulative antibiogram report in the hospital is most often used to guide initial empirical antimicrobial therapy to manage infections in patients who have not received definitive microbiological results to enable target treatment. Clinicians must understand the resistance rates of clinical isolates in local populations to ensure efficient and successful empirical treatment. Clinicians may treat patients with inappropriate empirical antimicrobial therapy using broad-spectrum antibiotic agents based on their inappropriate cumulative antibiograms, calculated based on total isolates, which can result in increased resistance to antimicrobial agents or ineffective treatment [1,2,3]. Cumulative antibiograms should be representative of geographic region and be accurate. We compared antibiograms from the FI with those from total isolates (TI)

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