4.5 Article

A multifaceted intervention improves antibiotic stewardship for skin and soft tissues infections

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Volume 46, Issue -, Pages 374-381

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2020.10.017

Keywords

Antibiotic stewardship; Antibiotic stewardship programs; Skin and soft tissue infections; Emergency department

Funding

  1. Merck Investigator Studies Program
  2. MAD-ID grant

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The study assessed the effectiveness of a multifaceted stewardship intervention to reduce inappropriate antibiotic use in emergency department patients with skin and soft tissue infections. The intervention led to improved guideline adherence and decreased antibiotic duration in the intervention site compared to the control site. Adherence to guidelines was inversely associated with SSTI severity and purulence.
Objective: Assess the effectiveness of a multifaceted stewardship intervention to reduce frequency and duration of inappropriate antibiotic use for emergency department (ED) patients with skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI). We hypothesized the antibiotic stewardship program would reduce antibiotic duration and improve guideline adherence in discharged SSTI patients. Design: Nonrandomized controlled trial. Setting: Academic EDs (intervention site and control site). Patients or participants: Attending physicians and nurse practitioners at participating EDs. Intervention(s): Education regarding guideline-based treatment of SSTI, tests of antimicrobial treatment of SSTI, implementation of a clinical treatment algorithm and order set in the electronic health record, and ED clinicians' audit and feedback. Results: We examined 583 SSTIs. At the intervention site, clinician adherence to guidelines improved from 41% to 51% (aOR = 2.13 [95% CI: 1.20-3.79]). At the control site, there were no changes in adherence during the intervention period (aOR = 1.17 [0.65-2.12]). The between-site comparison of these during vs. pre-intervention odds ratios was not different (aOR = 1.82 [0.79-4.21]). Antibiotic duration decreased by 26% at the intervention site during the intervention compared to pre-intervention (Adjusted Geometric Mean Ratio [95% CI] = 0.74 [0.66-0.84]). Adherence was inversely associated with SSTI severity (severe vs mild; adjusted OR 0.42 [0.20-0.89]) and purulence (0.32 [0.21-0.47]). Mean antibiotic prescription duration was 1.95 days shorter (95% CI: 1.54-2.33) in the time period following the intervention than pre-intervention period. Conclusions: A multifaceted intervention resulted in modest improvement in adherence to guidelines compared to a control site, driven by treatment duration reductions. (c) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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