Abstract

The implementation of new antimicrobial resistance stewardship programs is crucial in optimizing antibiotic use. However, prescription choices can be difficult during empiric therapy; clinicians must balance the survival benefits of broader spectrum antibiotics with associated increases in resistance. The aim of this study was to evaluate the overall feasibility of switching to narrow spectrum antibiotics during the empiric treatment of E. coli bacteraemia by quantifying changes in resistance rates, antibiotic usage, and mortality using a deterministic state-transition model. Three unique model scenarios (A, B, and C), each representing a progressively broader spectrum empiric treatment regimen, were used to compare outcomes at 5 years. We show that the empiric use of the narrowest spectrum (first-line) antibiotics can lead to reductions in resistance to second-line antibiotics and the use of third-line antibiotics, but they also lead to increases in resistance to first-line therapy and higher mortality. Crucially, we find that shortening the duration of empiric and overall treatment, as well as reducing the baseline mortality rate, are important for increasing the feasibility of switching to narrow spectrum antibiotics in the empiric treatment of E. coli bacteraemia. We provide a flexible model design to investigate optimal treatment approaches for other bacterial infections.

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