Abstract

BackgroundOutpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) is accepted as safe and effective for medically stable patients to complete intravenous (IV) antibiotics in an outpatient setting. Since, however, uninsured patients in the United States generally cannot afford OPAT, safety-net hospitals are often burdened with long hospitalizations purely to infuse antibiotics, occupying beds that could be used for patients requiring more intensive services. OPAT is generally delivered in one of four settings: infusion centers, nursing homes, at home with skilled nursing assistance, or at home with self-administered therapy. The first three—termed healthcare-administered OPAT (H-OPAT)—are most commonly used in the United States by patients with insurance funding. The fourth—self-administered OPAT (S-OPAT)—is relatively uncommon, with the few published studies having been conducted in the United Kingdom. With multidisciplinary planning, we established an S-OPAT clinic in 2009 to shift care of selected uninsured patients safely to self-administration of their IV antibiotics at home. We undertook this study to determine whether the low-income mostly non-English-speaking patients in our S-OPAT program could administer their own IV antimicrobials at home with outcomes as good as, or better than, those receiving H-OPAT.Methods and FindingsParkland Hospital is a safety-net hospital serving Dallas County, Texas. From 1 January 2009 to 14 October 2013, all uninsured patients meeting criteria were enrolled in S-OPAT, while insured patients were discharged to H-OPAT settings. The S-OPAT patients were trained through multilingual instruction to self-administer IV antimicrobials by gravity, tested for competency before discharge, and thereafter followed at designated intervals in the S-OPAT outpatient clinic for IV access care, laboratory monitoring, and physician follow-up. The primary outcome was 30-d all-cause readmission, and the secondary outcome was 1-y all-cause mortality. The study was adequately powered for readmission but not for mortality. Clinical, sociodemographic, and outcome data were collected from the Parkland Hospital electronic medical records and the US census, constituting a historical prospective cohort study. We used multivariable logistic regression to develop a propensity score predicting S-OPAT versus H-OPAT group membership from covariates. We then estimated the effect of S-OPAT versus H-OPAT on the two outcomes using multivariable proportional hazards regression, controlling for selection bias and confounding with the propensity score and covariates.Of the 1,168 patients discharged to receive OPAT, 944 (81%) were managed in the S-OPAT program and 224 (19%) by H-OPAT services. In multivariable proportional hazards regression models controlling for confounding and selection bias, the 30-d readmission rate was 47% lower in the S-OPAT group (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.53; 95% CI 0.35–0.81; p = 0.003), and the 1-y mortality rate did not differ significantly between the groups (aHR, 0.86; 95% CI 0.37–2.00; p = 0.73). The S-OPAT program shifted a median 26 d of inpatient infusion per patient to the outpatient setting, avoiding 27,666 inpatient days. The main limitation of this observational study—the potential bias from the difference in healthcare funding status of the groups—was addressed by propensity score modeling.ConclusionsS-OPAT was associated with similar or better clinical outcomes than H-OPAT. S-OPAT may be an acceptable model of treatment for uninsured, medically stable patients to complete extended courses of IV antimicrobials at home.

Highlights

  • A substantial source of hospital costs is the long-term administration of antimicrobial agents to patients with serious or life-threatening infections, such as osteomyelitis, endocarditis, and staphylococcal bacteremia [1,2,3]

  • S-Outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) may be an acceptable model of treatment for uninsured, medically stable patients to complete extended courses of IV antimicrobials at home

  • As the primary test of this hypothesis, we identified from the Parkland Hospital electronic medical records all hospital readmissions within 30 d of discharge from the hospitalization episode in which the antimicrobial therapy was started for all patients in the self-administered OPAT (S-OPAT) and healthcare-administered OPAT (H-OPAT) groups discharged in fiscal years 2010 (1 October 2009 to 30 September 2010) through 2013 (1 October 2012 to 30 September 2013)

Read more

Summary

Background

Patients sometimes need lengthy courses of antimicrobial agents to treat life-threatening infections. Uninsured people cannot usually afford H-OPAT and have to stay in safety-net hospitals (public hospitals that provide care to low-income, uninsured populations) for intravenous antibiotic treatment In this propensity-score-balanced retrospective cohort study, the researchers investigate whether uninsured patients discharged from a safety-net hospital in Texas to self-administer OPAT at home (S-OPAT) can achieve outcomes as good as or better than those achieved by patients receiving H-OPAT. This study did not address whether S-OPAT improves outcomes for patients compared with H-OPAT; a randomized controlled trial in which patients are randomly assigned to receive the two treatments is needed to do this These findings suggest that S-OPAT might make it possible for uninsured, medically stable patients to have extended courses of intravenous antimicrobials at home rather than remaining in the hospital until their treatment is complete. Wikipedia has a page on propensity score matching (note that Wikipedia is a free online encyclopedia that anyone can edit; available in several languages)

Methods and Findings
Introduction
Study Design and Participating Communities
Results
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call