HHE Sponsored supplement: Sepsis | Page 21

Duration of antimicrobial therapy in sepsis Despite in special situations (for example, infective endocarditis, Gram-negative meningitis), prolonged antimicrobial therapy has not been demonstrated as beneficial. In most cases, it implies more adverse effects, costs, LOS and resistance. Zilahi et al in their review of duration of antibiotic therapy in the ICU, conclude that shortened antibiotic courses are effective and safe but do not recommend a ‘one size fits’ all approach in all situations. 13 In VAP, eight-day versus five-day courses have demonstrated an increase in antibiotic-free days and a reduction in VAP infections by multidrug-resistant microorganisms without an increase in mortality and treatment failure, as reviewed by Pugh et al. 14 Chositprasitsakul et al demonstrated that short (six to ten days) versus long regimes (11–16 days) for Enterobacteriaceae bacteraemia obtained comparable outcomes and protection against multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. 15 Short-course therapy for invasive meningococcal disease (four versus seven days) was successful without disease recurrence. 16 (CDC) identified seven core elements for an efficacious model: • leadership commitment • drug expertise • action • accountability • tracking • reporting • education. Interventions to improve antimicrobial use are summarised in Table 1. 11 Most teams include infectious disease physicians or pharmacists dedicated to this activity, who collaborate with microbiologists, hospital epidemiologists and the clinicians responsible for each patient. In sepsis, intensivists with expertise in severe infections play a very important role. ASPs use several strategies such as restrictive prescriptive authority (limited use is sepsis where antibiotics are an emergency), prospective review and feedback, educational programmes, clinical guidelines, pharmacodynamic dose optimisation and computer-assisted decision support programs. But, are ASPs useful? Zhang and Singh conducted a systematic review of studies related to ASPs in ICUs and found that 85% of studies were positive in one or more of these outcomes: decreasing antibiotic use; ICU LOS; antibiotic resistance or prescribing costs. 12 To date, many studies have demonstrated the utility of ASPs to improve antibiotic prescription and reducing associated costs, but there are few data demonstrating that ASPs are effective in reducing antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic stewardship programmes 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 21 HHE 2018 | hospitalhealthcare.com Diagnostic stewardship One of the barriers to AS defined by Niederman 10 was, in case of negative cultures, the fear of not treating the causative microorganism. It is well known that the positivity of microbiological cultures in ICU is low, as the 51.4% reported in the EPIC II study. 17 In septic patients, delay to appropriate antibiotic therapy is an increased risk of death. 18 When conventional methods are used, time required to identify causative microorganisms often exceeds the clinical decision time and could prevent AS. Novel rapid identification tools would raise ASPs. New technology recently developed, such as matrix- assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight (MALDI-TOF), mass spectometry and PCR-assays should improve appropriateness of therapy and favour AS. 19,20 To date, these techniques might improve patient care and antibiotic appropriateness but must be carefully interpreted by clinicians. The process of ordering and interpreting sophisticated diagnostic tests is complex and sometimes confounding. It could result in an excess of false-positive tests. Routinely, clinicians order tests that frequently are not adequate according to a patient’s clinical condition. Diagnostic stewardship is defined by the Global Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System developed by WHO as follows “coordinated guidance and interventions to improve appropriate use of microbiological diagnostics to guide therapeutic decisions. It should promote appropriate, timely diagnostic testing, including specimen collection, and pathogen identification and accurate, timely reporting of results to guide patient treatment”. 21 The implementation of diagnostic stewardship includes different actions such as laboratory policies to refuse diagnostic tests if not adequate and educational interventions to train practitioners to order appropriate tests with correct sampling. Morgan et al signalled that a potential harm of diagnostic stewardship is that by reducing tests, some diagnostics can be missed, so close clinical monitoring is necessary to ensure patient safety. 22 Additionally,