To the Editor—Empirical use of antimicrobial agents has been in routine practice since the onset of the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Reference Adebisi, Jimoh and Ogunkola1 Even though COVID-19 is caused by a virus, health care practitioners have been equivocally prescribing different antibiotics to suspected and confirmed COVID-19 patients Reference Lansbury, Lim, Baskaran and Lim2 because of the presence of comorbid conditions and suspicion of superimposed community-acquired pneumonia. Reference Huttner, Catho, Pano-Pardo, Pulcini and Schouten3,Reference Mah-E-Muneer, Hassan and Biswas4 However, the global prevalence of bacterial superinfection in COVID-19 patients is much lower than the practice of empiric use of antimicrobials (1%–16% vs 72%) among people with COVID-1. Reference Mah-E-Muneer, Hassan and Biswas4,Reference Cataño-Correa, Cardona-Arias, Porras Mancilla and García5
Different antimicrobial agents, antivirals, antimalarial agents (eg, hydroxychloroquine) and antiparasitic agents (eg, ivermectin) have been used globally to treat people with COVID-19. Reference Mah-E-Muneer, Hassan and Biswas4–Reference Choudhary and Sharma6 This superfluous use of antimicrobials is not given much attention, yet it can lead to increasing incidence of antimicrobial resistance that is already a global threat. Despite widespread use of azithromycin and other antimicrobials among people hospitalized with COVID-19 in Uganda, the burden of prehospital antimicrobial use among this population is unknown.
We carried out a cross-sectional study using interviewer administered semistructured questionnaires to determine the prevalence of prehospital antimicrobial use and associated factors among persons hospitalized with COVID-19 at 2 large COVID-19 treatment units (CTU)—Mulago National Referral Hospital and Namboole Stadium—in Uganda, with bed capacities of >3,000 beds, catering to a range of patients from all over the country, between July and August 2021. The data were analyzed using STATA version 16 software (StataCorp, College Station, TX), and the study was approved by Mulago Hospital Research and Ethics Committee (approval no. MHREC 2097).
In total, 110 participants were enrolled, with median age of 37 years (IQR, 28–51). Among them, 62 (56.4%) were female, 59 (53.6%) Catholic, 80 (72.7%) were from the central region of the country, 68 (61.8%) were formerly employed at Namboole Stadium CTU and 64 (58.2%) were employed at Namboole Stadium CTU. Among the participants, 61 (55.4%) were unvaccinated for COVID-19. Of the 49 (44.6%) who had been vaccinated, 29 (60.4%) had received only 1 dose. Prior to admission, 44 participants (40%) were reported to be on treatment for COVID-19. Prehospital antimicrobial use was reported by 96 patients (87.3%), and 91 (94.8%) of these were antibiotics.
Azithromycin alone (n = 41) or in combination with other antibiotics (n = 8) was the most used antibiotic (52.1%). Moreover, 27 participants (28.7%) were on either intravenous ceftriaxone alone (n = 15) or in combination with other antibiotics (n = 11), or on piperacillin-tazobactam (n = 1). At bivariate analysis, preadmission treatment for COVID-19 (P = .007), religion (P = .008), and the CTU site (P < .0001) were related to prehospital antimicrobial use (Table 1). On multivariate logistic regression participants who initiated treatment before admission at a CTU had 10-fold higher odds of prehospital antimicrobial use than those who started treatment at the CTU (adjusted odds ratio, 10; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3–26.7; P = .026).
Note. IQR, interquartile range. Significant P values are shown in bold.
This study revealed a high percentage (87.3%) of prehospital antimicrobial use, with almost half of the antimicrobials prescribed by healthcare practitioners. These findings are similar to those of studies conducted during the first wave of the pandemic in Wuhan, China, Reference Huang, Wang and Li7 and Bangladesh. Reference Mah-E-Muneer, Hassan and Biswas4 Although nosocomial bacterial and fungal infections may develop in during the course of COVID-19 among hospitalized patients, superinfections with these pathogens are very uncommon among patients in the outpatient settings. Reference Ong, Farhanah and Linn8 To mitigate the overprescription of antimicrobials, the World Health Organization has made available a new tool—AWaRe (Access, Watch and Reserve). 9 The high prevalence of prehospital use among Ugandans diagnosed with COVID-19 highlight the need of heightened awareness on the AWaRe tool and the general aspect of antimicrobial stewardship among the general population and healthcare workers alike. Antimicrobial use for prophylaxis in mild cases of COVID-19 is strongly discouraged by the WHO guideline on clinical management of COVID-19.
However, in moderate-to-critical cases of COVID-19 with clinically suspected bacterial or fungal coinfection, the guidelines encourage the use of antimicrobials. 10 In our study, most patients took oral azithromycin, which is consistent with study done in Bangladesh, Reference Mah-E-Muneer, Hassan and Biswas4 followed by intravenous ceftriaxone but no antivirals were used. Antimicrobial stewardship program that promote and oversee the safe and judicious use of antimicrobials should be implemented to safeguard the antimicrobials use for feature use and decrease the advent of antimicrobial resistance. Moreover, healthcare workers should be familiar with the WHO AWaRe tool to curtail the increasing concern of postpandemic antimicrobial-resistance–related morbidity and mortality.
In conclusion, prehospital antimicrobial use, including intravenous antibiotics is common among patients with COVID-19, particularly among those who initiated COVID-19 treatment while at home. This antimicrobial overuse can have a devastating consequence in terms of accelerated antimicrobial resistance.
Acknowledgments
We acknowledge administrative support from CTUs, nurses, clinicians, and patients.
Financial support
Research reported in this publication was supported by the Fogarty International Center of the National Institutes of Health, US Department of State Office of the US Global AIDS Coordinator and Health Diplomacy (S/GAC), and President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) (award no. 1R25TW011213). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Conflict of interest
All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.