Introduction
Antimicrobial stewardship efforts ensure the safe and judicious use of antimicrobials. Hospital antimicrobial stewardship programs have historically focused on optimizing the use of antibiotics during inpatient stays. Reference Barlam, Cosgrove and Abbo1 However, recent publications have demonstrated inappropriate antimicrobial prescribing at hospital discharge and the need for innovative stewardship strategies for this space. Reference Vaughn, Gandhi and Chopra2,Reference Vaughn, Hersh and Spivak3
Approximately 1 in 8 patients discharged from an inpatient setting receive an antimicrobial at discharge. Reference Dyer, Dodds Ashley and Anderson4 In their multi-hospital study, Vaughn and colleagues evaluated two infectious conditions and reported nearly half of patients experienced antibiotic overuse at discharge where overuse was characterized by unnecessary antibiotic use, excessive duration, and suboptimal use of fluoroquinolone therapy. Importantly, antibiotic overuse varied significantly between sites (15.9%–80.6%) and was less commonly observed in academic hospitals. Reference Vaughn, Gandhi and Chopra2 Our study aimed to characterize discharge antibiotic prescribing for three common infectious disease states, building on the work by Vaughn and colleagues, at a large, academic medical center to determine the extent of antimicrobial overuse and opportunities for antimicrobial stewardship intervention.
Methods
Study design and setting
This single-center, retrospective cohort study included adult patients age 18 and older admitted to The University of Kansas Health System and prescribed antibiotic(s) at discharge for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), uncomplicated cystitis, or mild, non-purulent cellulitis between August 1, 2021 and July 31, 2022. Patients were identified for inclusion based on antibiotic indication via review of admission diagnostic codes and chart review confirmation. The following patient populations were excluded: patients who did not receive antibiotic(s) upon hospital discharge, died during hospitalization, and transferred to another hospital or an intensive care unit, and patients for whom standard regimens may be inappropriate such as pregnant patients, severely immunocompromised, and patients with concomitant infections. This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Clinical outcomes
The primary outcome was percentage of patients with antibiotic overuse at hospital discharge, defined as meeting at least one of the following: unnecessary antibiotic use, excessive antibiotic duration, and suboptimal fluoroquinolone use. Secondary outcomes included mortality, readmission, emergency department (ED) visit, incidence of Clostridioides difficile infection, and provider-documented or patient-reported antibiotic-associated adverse effect(s) all assessed within 30 days of hospital discharge.
Data analysis
Descriptive statistics were reported as median and interquartile range or mean and standard deviation based on normality of data, where applicable. Quantitative variables were compared using 2-sided chi-squared, student t-test, or analysis of variance as appropriate (ANOVA), with a p-value of <0.05 considered statistically significant.
Results
In total, 2,865 ambulatory antibiotic prescriptions were evaluated of which 182 patients met inclusion criteria. Antibiotic overuse was common for all three disease states: CAP (n = 87/125, 69.6%), uncomplicated cystitis (n = 21/28, 75.0%), and mild, non-purulent cellulitis (n = 28/29, 96.6%). Excessive antibiotic duration occurred most frequently at 65.6%, 60.7%, and 96.6% of patients diagnosed with CAP, uncomplicated cystitis, and mild, non-purulent cellulitis, respectively. When comparing patients who experienced antibiotic overuse to those who did not, overuse was associated with approximately one more inpatient hospital day (2.48 vs. 3.32 days, p = 0.001) and, on average, three extra days of antibiotics (5.39 vs. 8.32 days, p = 0.001) (Table 1). Regarding secondary outcomes, there was a statistically significant increase in the amount of ED visits within 30 days (2.2% vs. 22.8%, p = 0.001) while all other secondary outcomes findings were non-significant.
Discussion
In this study of 182 patients, nearly 3 out of every 4 patients prescribed an antibiotic at hospital discharge for CAP, uncomplicated cystitis, and mild, non-purulent cellulitis met criteria for antibiotic overuse. Excessive antibiotic duration was the most common type of antibiotic overuse for all three infectious conditions resulting in an average of three additional days of antibiotics. Given the high rates of antibiotic overuse at hospital discharge at our institution (74.7% overall), implementation of novel approaches to antimicrobial stewardship at transitions of care is crucial to improving antibiotic use. In the present state, inpatient pharmacists at our health system review discharge medications for most patients prior to discharge, however, no formal interventions have been developed. The Reducing Overuse of Antibiotics at Discharge Home Framework provides a three-tiered system for developing antimicrobial stewardship strategies to reduce antibiotic overuse at hospital discharge. Reference Vaughn, Hersh and Spivak3 In their study of 800 patients receiving antibiotics at discharge, Mercuro and colleagues demonstrated a significant improvement in optimal antibiotic prescribing with targeted, pharmacist-led interventions. Reference Mercuro, Medler and Kenney5 Thus, creation of a pharmacist-led intervention at transitions of care may be an effective means by which to reduce antibiotic overuse within ours and other institutions.
Our study benefits from several strengths. First, the definitions for each disease state and the categories for overuse are highly specific and supported by practice guidelines. Second, a thorough patient investigation and chart review allowed for immunocompromised patients, which might skew outcomes, to be confidently excluded. However, several limitations exist. First, our study had a small sample size, as many patients were excluded due to inaccurate antimicrobial indications, resulting in less than 30 patients included in the uncomplicated cystitis and mild, non-purulent cellulitis arms. Second, the observational study design is susceptible to confounding. Lastly, the study had a low incidence of secondary outcome events, and low rates of such outcomes may be due to a high degree of patients lost to follow-up.
In summary, our analysis demonstrated a high amount of antibiotic overuse at hospital discharge for patients treated for three common infectious disease states at a large, academic medical center. Future antimicrobial stewardship efforts in this space should be tailored based on institution-specific data with enhanced pharmacist involvement to ensure optimized antimicrobial use.
Acknowledgments
None.
Author contribution
Conceptualization: R. Zodrow, A. Olson, S. Willis, and M. Klatt
Data Abstraction: R. Zodrow
Data Analysis: R. Zodrow, D. Grauer, and M. Klatt
Writing: R. Zodrow, A. Olson, S. Willis, and M. Klatt
Submission: R. Zodrow, A. Olson, S. Willis, and M. Klatt
Financial support
None reported.
Competing interests
All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.