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AMS Indian Persceptive

Jun 15, 2015

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Health & Medicine

Antibiotic Policy - Implementation and Measuring outcomes - An Indian Perspective
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Page 1: AMS Indian Persceptive

The presentation is solely meant for Academic purpose

Page 2: AMS Indian Persceptive
Page 3: AMS Indian Persceptive
Page 4: AMS Indian Persceptive

500 beds.

Tertiary care centre with DNB training in 19 specialties .

AMS program initiated in January 2010

Page 5: AMS Indian Persceptive

1. Education & Awareness

2. Evolving local Antibiogram

3. Management support – talking to the “consultants”

4. Prioritisation – areas/drugs

5. Feedback – management & consultants

6. Surveillance

Page 6: AMS Indian Persceptive

Initial period of 1 year (2009) – monthly CMEs on Resistance / Basics of Antibiotics and Common mistakes in antibiotic prescriptions.

The Hospital staff was sensitized to the issues – 1. Antibiotics are important.

2. There is a trained person in charge.

3. Management is serious about this.

Page 7: AMS Indian Persceptive

1. Full time Microbiologist employed.

2. Reporting standardized as per CLSI guidelines.

3. New indigenous software designed and integrated into the LIS/HIS – captures reports from the LIS and gives output as “Antibiogram” Location/Duration/Drugs/Bugs.

Page 8: AMS Indian Persceptive

Monthly Meeting with Consultants and CMD

Compliance measures of AMS and Outcome Measures to be presented every 3 months

Direct involvement and “pressure” from top management crucial in keeping the momentum.

Page 9: AMS Indian Persceptive

Focus of – ICUs, Surgical Prophylaxis and common infections with abuse potential (ARI/AGE)

Focus on select antibiotics.

Risk stratification of patients and local data (marriage between clinical category & microbiology) – KIMS manual for empirical therapy in sepsis/infection

Page 10: AMS Indian Persceptive
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• ICUs – 6 monthly audit – Retrospective analysis of case records of all culture positive cases for choice of initial empiric therapy, whether de-escalated after reports and total duration of therapy.

• Surgical Prophylaxis – quarterly audit of choice, timing and duration of antibiotic use for prophylaxis in only clean surgeries.

Page 12: AMS Indian Persceptive

1. Resistance to sentinel antibiotics

2. MDRO isolation rates

3. Consumption of sentinel antibiotics

4. De-escalation rates

Page 13: AMS Indian Persceptive

2010 – 400 beds – 119820 patient days

2011 – 450 beds – 131424 patient days

2012 – 500 beds – 154692 patient days

Overall “sales” might have increased!!!

Page 14: AMS Indian Persceptive

3 months prospective study

All admissions in the MD -ICU

Non-sepsis syndromes excluded

N = 187 (of sepsis syndrome)

Classified as Type 1/2/3/4 as per criteria

De-escalation defined as withdrawal of MDR-GNB cover (Carb/Tige/Colistin)

Page 15: AMS Indian Persceptive

Type 1 – Ceftriaxone/Doxycycline/ Azithromycin

Type 2 –BL/BLI, Amikacin, Ertapenem, Clarithromycin (Lung/Unknown), Teicoplanin (Unknown) Linezolid (Lung, SSTI)

Page 16: AMS Indian Persceptive

Type 3 – Imipenem/Meropenem , Teicoplanin (Unknown) , Linezolid (Lung, SSTI), Clarithromycin (lung)

Type 4 - Tigecycline, Colistin, Flucanozole/ Caspofungin

Page 17: AMS Indian Persceptive

Site of Infection Type 1 Type 2 Type 3 Type 4

SSTI (10) 5 2 3 0

Lung (45) 13 4 10 18

Intraabdominal (25) 2 4 17 2

Urinary tract (52) 0 16 26 10

CNS (1) 1 0 0 0

Unknown (20) 0 2 14 4

Page 18: AMS Indian Persceptive

Patient Type

Total Number

Total culture positivity

Initial Antibiotic Appropriate antibiotic

1 21 8 7 (87.5%)

2 49 18 16 (88.88%)

3 83 41 37 (90.24%)

4 34 29 28 (96.55%)

Page 19: AMS Indian Persceptive

Patient Class Total culture

positivity De-escalation done

Type 1 8 1 (12.5%)

Type 2 18 6 (33.33%)

Type 3 41 11 (26.83%))

Type 4 29 7 (24.14%)

Page 20: AMS Indian Persceptive

Patient Class Average APACHE-II

Mortality %

Expected mortality as per APACHE-2 scores (international standards)

Type 1 13.8 10 15

Type 2 24.4 39 40

Type 3 29 44 55

Type 4 28 59 55

Page 21: AMS Indian Persceptive

3.7

3.8

3.9

4

4.1

4.2

4.3

4.4

4.5

Pre-AMS (2008) Study period

Average LOS in ICU

Average LOS

Page 22: AMS Indian Persceptive

Protocol based , patient risk stratification - derived from history, physical examination & simple labs –achieves high degree of appropriateness, with comparable mortality!

(37% of patients were spared from empiric use of carbapenems in ICU)

Page 23: AMS Indian Persceptive

1. Protocol based antibiotic use in MD-ICU

2. Top Management Support INCLUDES IT.

3. Closed ICU system – Intensivist Managed

4. Willingness among “most” of the clinicians to “trust” the ID advice.

Page 24: AMS Indian Persceptive

1. Protocol based Antibiotic policy is safe.

2. Antibiotic Policy can be implemented.

3. Improvement in surgical prophylaxis use - > 90% compliance except for duration.

Page 25: AMS Indian Persceptive

1. Scope limited to Medical ICUs & Surgical prophylaxis & Few antibiotics only.

2. Implementation in ICU monitored and outcome surveillance done only twice in this 2 years.

3. Cost analysis not done

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1. Actions not taken based on surveillance reports from wards - SHORTAGE OF MANPOWER

2. Unable to demonstrate gain in resistance profile nor significant reduction in AUR/AUD

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THANK YOU