HHE Sponsored supplement: Sepsis | Seite 20

antimicrobial stewardship Antimicrobial stewardship in sepsis The set of initiatives to prescribe the best antimicrobial regime with fewer side-effects and minimal impact on subsequent resistance is discussed Elisabeth Esteban MD PhD Paediatric Intensive Care Department, Paediatric and Neonatal Transport Team, Institut de Recerca Hospital Sant Joan de Déu de Barcelona, University of Barcelona, Spain Ricard Ferrer MD PhD Intensive Care Department, Hospital Universitario Vall d’Hebron, Barcelona, Spain; CIBER Enfermedades Respiratorias, Spain; Shock, Organ Dysfunction and Resuscitation Research Group (SODIR), VHIR, Barcelona, Spain Respiratorias, Spain; Shock, Organ Dysfunction and Resuscitation Research Group (SODIR), VHIR, Barcelona, Spain Sepsis is a life-threatening condition that affects more than 19 million people each year. 1 Among the measures to address this problem, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) guidelines established a set of recommendations, including early administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics, preferably within one hour. 2 Combination antibiotic therapy is frequently required to ensure adequate empiric coverage. After pathogen isolation or favourable clinical response, even if negative cultures, empirical antimicrobials can be narrowed to more specific agents. The objectives of this de-escalation are reducing antimicrobial resistance and diminishing adverse antibiotic events. The frequency of de-escalation varies among studies. Mokart et al reported 40% de-escalation in septic patients in an oncologic intensive care unit (ICU) without any impact in outcomes. 3 An adequate empirical antibiotic treatment and the compliance to guidelines regarding the empirical anti-pseudomonal antibiotics used in the ICU were independently associated with frequency of de-escalation. 3 A number of initiatives to promote optimal antimicrobial therapy have been implemented. The ABISS-Edusepsis project (AntiBiotic Intervention in Severe Sepsis; www. edusepsis.org), evaluated the impact of a quality improvement intervention focused on time to antibiotic in patients with severe sepsis. After the intervention, time to antibiotic in children was reduced from 60 (21.2–131.2) to 30 (21.1–60) minutes (p<0.001). The percentage of de-escalation was 50% and 48% before and after the intervention, respectively. 4 The frequency of multidrug resistance is dramatically increasing around the world. Some estimates suggest that antimicrobial resistance could be responsible for 10 million deaths annually by 2050. 5 The World Health Organization (WHO) reported more than 50% resistance of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae to third- generation cephalosporins and quinolones in majority of world regions. 6 A distressing increase in carbapenem-resistant microorganisms, and extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producers have been reported. Multidrug-resistant microorganisms increase mortality, hospital length of stay and associated costs. 7 This situation is especially dramatic in sepsis where adequacy of empirical antibiotic therapy is a determinant of survival. Several initiatives have been adopted in order to fight this phenomenon. Governments 20 HHE 2018 | hospitalhealthcare.com and Health Agencies have adopted policies to stimulate new antibiotic development and optimise the use of current agents. Judicious and optimal use of antimicrobials is the core of these efforts. Antimicrobial stewardship Antimicrobial stewardship (AS) has been defined as “the optimal selection, dosage, and duration of antimicrobial treatment that results in the best clinical outcome for the treatment or prevention of infection, with minimal toxicity to the patient and minimal impact on subsequent resistance”. 8 The best antimicrobial was defined by Joseph et al using the four Ds: “right drug, right dose, de-escalation and right duration”. 9 We can also add that the best antimicrobial must have the minimum adverse effects to the patients and ideally with fewer costs. AS implies not only de-escalation (substitute an initially broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy to a narrower spectrum regimen) but also discontinuation, removal of agents in case of multidrug therapies, or shortening the duration of treatment. Even though AS has been recognised as good practice for clinicians and institutions, its implementation varies widely in hospitals. Niederman described how de-escalation strategies in ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) varies from 23% to 74% and determined some of the barriers against it. 10 The main obstacles to AS are: fear that the patient will deteriorate; fear that the patient could have other microorganisms different to those isolated; difficulties in cases of negative cultures; and the lack of local guides to de-escalation. The real concern for intensivists taking care of sepsis is whether AS is a safe practice. This is a relevant question, considering that curing their patients is their main goal. There are many tools to make AS a safe practice, including AS programmes, clinical control, improvement in microorganism identification and use of biomarkers to guide decisions. AS programmes AS programmes (ASP) have been created to support health care practitioners in ensuring appropriate antimicrobial use. Each hospital should create a team according to their personnel and budget. There is no rigid way to follow; each hospital must adapt it to its own needs. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention