Antimicrobial stewardship program
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Transcript Antimicrobial stewardship program
Antimicrobial Stewardship
The Problem
Antibiotic resistance is a worldwide problem
Antibiotics are among the most commonly prescribed
drugs used in human medicine
Up to 50% of antibiotics prescribed for people are
unnecessary or inappropriate
Misuse of antibiotics leads to the emergence and spread
of
antibiotic resistant organisms (e.g., methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycinresistant enterococci, etc.)
Healthcare-associated infections (e.g., Clostridium
difficile, etc.)
“…the thoughtless person playing with
penicillin treatment is morally
responsible for the death of the man
who finally succumbs to infection with
the penicillin-resistant organism.”
Alexander Fleming
National Action Plan to
Combat Antibiotic Resistance
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
advised acute care hospitals to implement antibiotic
stewardship programs (ASPs)
The Joint Commission (TJC) implemented
antimicrobial stewardship standard MM.09.01.01
effective date January 1, 2017
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS)
intends to require all acute care hospitals and longterm care facilities to incorporate an ASP as a
mandatory Condition of Participation
Antibiotic Stewardship
Antimicrobial stewardship is a coordinated
program that promotes the appropriate use of
antimicrobials including antibiotics, improves patient
outcomes, reduces microbial resistance, and
decreases the spread of infections caused by
multidrug-resistant organisms.
Utilizes informatics, data collection, personnel, and
policy/procedures to promote optimal selection,
dosing, and duration of therapy for antimicrobial
agents throughout the course of their use
ASP Core Elements
Leadership Commitment: Dedicating necessary
human, financial, and IT resources
Accountability: Single physician leader responsible
for outcomes
Drug Expertise: Single pharmacist leader
responsible for outcomes
Action: Implementing specific, proven interventions
Tracking: Monitoring antibiotic prescribing/resistance
patterns
Reporting: Informing key stakeholders of progress
regarding antibiotic use & resistance
Education: Updates on resistance & optimal
prescribing
ASP Goals
improve patient outcomes;
slow the emergence of resistance;
prevent the spread of infections;
limit toxicity associated with antimicrobials including
secondary infections (eg, Clostridium difficile);
contain costs.
Optimal Antimicrobial Use
All prescribers at ETMC Tyler are expected to adhere to
the following principles when prescribing antimicrobial
therapy:
Empiric therapy
initiate promptly after collection of appropriate
specimens (whenever appropriate and possible);
target likely pathogen and source (anatomic site of
infection);
consider possible antimicrobial resistance based on
recent antimicrobial exposure and local resistance
patterns;
Optimal Antimicrobial Use
Empiric therapy
select the narrowest spectrum possible for achieving
the intended effect;
determine the appropriate dose, route and frequency
of therapy;
Tailoring therapy
review microbiology results and broaden or narrow
therapy as appropriate;
convert intravenous therapy to oral as soon as
possible and clinically indicated.
Duration of therapy
use shortest effective duration of therapy.
ETMC Antimicrobial
Stewardship
ETMC established an ASP in 2007
ASP core membership:
Infectious Diseases physician
clinical pharmacists
ETMC Antimicrobial
Stewardship
ASP activities
Prospective audit of all inpatient antimicrobial
use twice weekly
IV to oral conversion of therapy
Dose adjustment/optimization
Detection and prevention of antibiotic-related
drug-drug interactions
Improve adherence to guidelines
Therapeutic drug monitoring
ETMC Antimicrobial
Stewardship
Tracking and Reporting
Medication use evaluations/antibiotic
audits to assess quality of antibiotic
use
Days of antibiotic therapy
Detecting/monitoring trends in
antimicrobial resistance
Inappropriate use of antibiotics contributes to emergence and spread
of antibiotic resistant organisms and health-care associated
infections.
Antimicrobial stewardship is vital for preserving existing antibiotics
and improving patient outcomes while minimizing unintended
consequences.
Antibiotic prescribing should be prudent, thoughtful and rational.
It was on a short-cut through the hospital kitchens that
Albert was first approached by a member of the
Antibiotic Resistance.