HHE Sponsored supplement: Sepsis | Page 22

Table 1 Stewardship interventions to improve antimicrobial use as defined by CDC Broad interventions Antibiotic “time-outs” Reevaluation of the continuing need or election of antimicrobial 48 hours after the onset of the therapy Prior authorisation Restrict the use of some antibiotics to ensure that use is reviewed with an expert. Prospective audit and feedback The audits are conducted by experts other than the treating team. Pharmacy-driven interventions Automatic changes from intravenous to oral antibiotic For selected antibiotics in adequate situations Dose adjustments In case of organ dysfunction Dose optimisation Optimising therapy for highly drug-resistant bacteria Automatic alerts in situations where treatment might be unnecessarily duplicative Simultaneous use of multiple antimicrobials with the same spectra Time-sensitive automatic stop orders Specially in case of surgical prophylaxis Detection and prevention of antibiotic-related drug–drug interactions Infection- and syndrome-specific interventions Community-acquired pneumonia In compliance with guidelines, adjusting therapy to culture results and optimising the duration of regimes Urinary tract infections Eluding unnecessary urine cultures and treatment of asymptomatic patients. Skin and soft tissue infections Securing patients do not get antibiotics with wide broad spectra and ensuring the correct duration of therapies Empiric coverage of MRSA infection Stopping treatment for MRSA if the cause is methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus Clostridium difficile infections To stop futile antibiotics in all patients diagnosed with Clostridium difficile infections Treatment of culture proven invasive infections Adjusting antibiotics or discontinuing them www.cdc.gov/antibiotic-use/healthcare/implementation/core-elements.html clinicians should correctly interpret positive cultures, identifying those patients with colonisation without infection. Biomarkers to guide AS in sepsis There are several biomarkers used as infection biomarkers. C-reactive protein and procalcitonin (PCT) are the most broadly studied. PCT is a biomarker produced by a host response in bacterial infection. The half-life of PCT is about 24 hours and a progressive decrease in PCT levels is seen in well-controlled infections. Diverse studies show how PCT algorithms used to guide initiation or duration of therapy decreases antimicrobial consumption without increasing adverse clinical outcomes. 23,24 A meta-analysis aiming to summarise the effect of a procalcitonin 22 HHE 2018 | hospitalhealthcare.com (PCT)-guided antibiotic treatment on outcomes in acute lower respiratory tract infections showed significant reductions in antibiotic duration. 25 Nevertheless, PCT is not only an infection biomarker, but can also be affected in inflammatory conditions, so it is difficult to interpret in surgical patients. It is accepted that PCT levels <0.5ng/ml or a decrease of 80% of the highest PCT peak is useful to stop antibiotics and predicting good outcome but this algorithm failed in a single-centre study in patients with septic shock secondary to intra-abdominal infection. 26 In a study in children admitted to the intensive care unit after cardiopulmonary bypass, Jordan et al demonstrated that PCT was useful in diagnosing bacterial infection, but increased the cut-off on PCT to 2ng/ml, higher than in medical