Abstract

Our antimicrobial pharmacist-led intervention included: (a) a structured review of antibiotic prescriptions; (b) educating prescribers on antimicrobial therapy; (c) monthly reporting of department-level rates of blood sampling for culture. Daily review began in May 2018 and was discontinued after 10 months; however, the other interventions were conducted throughout the study period. This study aimed to evaluate the sustained impact of pharmacist’s interventions on antimicrobial therapy and clinical outcomes between the baseline (May–December 2017), intervention (May–December 2018), and post-intervention (May–December 2019) periods. The rate of blood culture collections before starting antipseudomonal agent therapy was significantly increased from the baseline to post-intervention periods (71% vs. 85%, p < 0.001). Antipseudomonal agent therapy was more frequently de-escalated in the post-intervention period than in the baseline period (73% vs. 54%, p = 0.038). Total use of antipseudomonal agents was reduced from the baseline to intervention periods and persisted during the post-intervention period (50.5 vs. 41.8 and 42.6 DDD per 1000 patient-days, p = 0.016 and p = 0.022, respectively). During the study period, there were significant reductions in the incidence of hospital-acquired Clostridioides difficile infection (1.12, 0.54, and 0.51 per 10,000 patient-days, respectively, p = 0.031) and 30-day mortality with bacteremia (19%, 18%, and 12%, respectively, p = 0.005). Our pharmacist-led interventions sustainably achieved appropriate antimicrobial therapy and improved clinical outcomes.

Highlights

  • Infectious diseases caused by pathogens having high antimicrobial resistance (AMR), leading to prolonged illness and high mortality, are a global health threat [1]

  • Before starting antipseudomonal agent therapy, the rate of blood culture collections was significantly increased from the baseline period

  • An infectious disease pharmacist-led intervention contributed to a continuous increase in the rate of blood culture collections before starting broad-spectrum antibiotics and the rate of de-escalation therapy, which may have led to a reduction in the total use of antipseudomonal agents and incidence of Hospital-acquired C. difficile infection (HA-CDI)

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious diseases caused by pathogens having high antimicrobial resistance (AMR), leading to prolonged illness and high mortality, are a global health threat [1]. Antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) foster appropriate antibiotic use, reduce the prevalence of AMR infections, and improve patient outcomes [2,3,4]. The Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines recommend the implementation of ASPs in healthcare facilities [2]. Our previous report demonstrated that this project efficiently reduces the use of antipseudomonal agents and decreases the prevalence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) [3]. Since 2014, there have been few changes in the use of antipseudomonal agents and clinical outcomes under this project [3]

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