4.7 Article

Antimicrobial Stewardship in Surgery: A Literature Bibliometric Analysis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.847420

Keywords

surgery; bibliometric analysis; hospital management; trend; antimicrobial stewardship (AMS)

Funding

  1. Clinical Science and Technology Innovation Project of Shanghai Shen Kang Hospital Development Center [SHDC12021615]
  2. Clinical Research Innovation and Cultivation Fund of Ren Ji Hospital [RJPY-LX-008]
  3. Research Funds of Shanghai Rising Stars of Medical Talents Youth Development Program-Youth Medical Talents: Clinical Pharmacist Program [(2021) 099]
  4. Shanghai Health and Family Planning commission [20194Y0007]
  5. China International Medical Foundation [Z-2018-35-2003]

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Publications on surgical antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) management have increased in recent decades, with the USA being the most prolific. Epidemiological investigations of surgical-related infections, antibiotic prescriptions, and antibiotic resistance are fast-developing research trends.
BackgroundAntimicrobial resistance and the dwindling antibiotic development pipeline have resulted in a looming post-antibiotic era. Research related to antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) has grown rapidly in the past decade, especially in the field of surgery. We conducted a bibliometric analysis of these publications. In addition, we aimed to identify research hotspots and infer future research trends. MethodsWe screened global publications on AMS in the surgical field over ten years (between 2011 and 2020) from the Web of Science core collection database. The keywords antimicrobial or antibiotic, stewardship, management, management strategies, programme, surgery and surgical were used to search for related papers. VOS viewer, R software, and other machine learning and visualization tools were used to conduct the bibliometric analysis of the publications. ResultsWe identified 674 publications on AMS in surgical fields; antimicrobial stewardship (with total link strength of 1,096) was the most frequent keyword, and had strong links to antimicrobial resistance and guidelines. The top 100 most cited papers had a mean citation count of 47.21 (range: 17-1155) citations, which were cited by survey research studies, clinical trials, and observational studies. The highest-ranking and most cited journal was Clinical Infectious Diseases with eight publications. Jason G. Newland from Washington University wrote seven papers and was cited 1,282 times. The University of Washington published 17 papers and was cited 1,258 times, with the largest number of publications by author and organization. The USA published 198 papers and cooperated with 21 countries, mainly partnering with Italy, the UK, and Canada. Published articles mainly focused on the current clinical situation regarding surgical AMS management, antibiotic prescription, and antibiotic resistance. ConclusionsPublications on surgical AMS management have increased in recent decades, with the USA being the most prolific. Epidemiological investigations of surgical-related infections, antibiotic prescriptions, and antibiotic resistance are fast-developing research trends. However, further improvements are still needed according to the recommendations gained from the bibliometric analysis.

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