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Antimicrobial consumption and resistance in adult hospital inpatients in 53 countries: results of an internet-based global point prevalence survey

Authors :
Ann Versporten, MPH
Peter Zarb, PhD
Isabelle Caniaux, MPharm
Marie-Françoise Gros, MD
Nico Drapier, BAI
Mark Miller, MD
Vincent Jarlier, ProfMD
Dilip Nathwani, ProfMD
Herman Goossens, ProfMD
Andi Koraqi
Iris Hoxha
Silva Tafaj
Denada Lacej
Martin Hojman
Rodolfo Ernesto Quiros
Lilit Ghazaryan
Kelly A Cairns
Allen Cheng
Kylie C Horne
Fiona F Doukas
Thomas Gottlieb
Jameela Alsalman
Koen Magerman
Gounongbe YT Marielle
Amela Dedeic Ljubovic
André Afonso Machado Coelho
Ana Cristina Gales
Emma Keuleyan
Deana Sabuda
Jennifer Lee Boswell
John M Conly
Alvaro Rojas
Camila Carvajal
Jaime Labarca
Antonio Solano
Carlos Ramírez Valverde
Juan M Villalobos-Vindas
Irina Pristas
Vanda Plecko
Niki Paphitou
Erjona Shaqiri
Maija-Liisa Rummukainen
Karaman Pagava
Irma Korinteli
Tobias Brandt
Sabine Messler
Anthony Enimil
Elias Iosifidis
Emmanuel Roilides
Mamadou Saliou Sow
Sharmila Sengupta
Joby V George
Aruna Poojary
Priyanka Patil
Jafar Soltani
Zahra Jafarpour
Hadi Ameen
David Fitzgerald
Yasmin Maor
Michal Chowers
Elizabeth Temkin
Susanna Esposito
Luca Arnoldo
Silvio Brusaferro
Yoshiaki Gu
Feras Darwish El-Hajji
Nam Joong Kim
Baktygul Kambaralieva
Jana Pavare
Lelde Zarakauska
Vytautas Usonis
Sigita Burokiene
Inga Ivaskeviciene
Gordana Mijovic
Natasa Duborija-Kovacevic
Kristen Bondesio
Kenneth Iregbu
Oyinlola Oduyebo
Denis Raka
Lul Raka
Svetlana Rachina
Mushira Abdulaziz Enani
Mohamed Al Shehri
Biljana Carevic
Gorana Dragovac
Dusanka Obradovic
Aleksandra Stojadinovic
Lili Radulovic
Jia EN Wu
Gladys Wei Teng Chung
Hui Hiong Chen
Paul Anantharajah Tambyah
David Lye
Sock Hoon Tan
Tat Ming Ng
Hui Lin Tay
Moi Lin Ling
Maciej Piotr Chlebicki
Andrea L Kwa
Winnie Lee
Bojana Beović
Angela Dramowski
Heather Finlayson
Jantjie Taljaard
Guillermo Ojeda-Burgos
Pilar Retamar
Johan Lucas
Wolter Pot
Cees Verduin
Jan Kluytmans
Michael Scott
Mamoon A Aldeyab
Bernadette McCullagh
Cairine Gormley
David Sharpe
Mark Gilchrist
Laura Whitney
Matthew Laundy
Debbie Lockwood
Simon B Drysdale
Jennifer Boudreaux
Edward J Septimus
Nickie Greer
Gerard Gawrys
Edgar Rios
Suzanne May
Source :
The Lancet Global Health, Vol 6, Iss 6, Pp e619-e629 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2018.

Abstract

Summary: Background: The Global Point Prevalence Survey (Global-PPS) established an international network of hospitals to measure antimicrobial prescribing and resistance worldwide. We aimed to assess antimicrobial prescribing and resistance in hospital inpatients. Methods: We used a standardised surveillance method to collect detailed data about antimicrobial prescribing and resistance from hospitals worldwide, which were grouped by UN region. The internet-based survey included all inpatients (adults, children, and neonates) receiving an antimicrobial who were on the ward at 0800 h on one specific day between January and September, 2015. Hospitals were classified as primary, secondary, tertiary (including infectious diseases hospitals), and paediatric hospitals. Five main ward types were defined: medical wards, surgical wards, intensive-care units, haematology oncology wards, and medical transplantation (bone marrow or solid transplants) wards. Data recorded included patient characteristics, antimicrobials received, diagnosis, therapeutic indication according to predefined lists, and markers of prescribing quality (eg, whether a stop or review date were recorded, and whether local prescribing guidelines existed and were adhered to). We report findings for adult inpatients. Findings: The Global-PPS for 2015 included adult data from 303 hospitals in 53 countries, including eight lower-middle-income and 17 upper-middle-income countries. 86 776 inpatients were admitted to 3315 adult wards, of whom 29 891 (34·4%) received at least one antimicrobial. 41 213 antimicrobial prescriptions were issued, of which 36 792 (89·3%) were antibacterial agents for systemic use. The top three antibiotics prescribed worldwide were penicillins with β-lactamase inhibitors, third-generation cephalosporins, and fluoroquinolones. Carbapenems were most frequently prescribed in Latin America and west and central Asia. Of patients who received at least one antimicrobial, 5926 (19·8%) received a targeted antibacterial treatment for systemic use, and 1769 (5·9%) received a treatment targeting at least one multidrug-resistant organism. The frequency of health-care-associated infections was highest in Latin America (1518 [11·9%]) and east and south Asia (5363 [10·1%]). Overall, the reason for treatment was recorded in 31 694 (76·9%) of antimicrobial prescriptions, and a stop or review date in 15 778 (38·3%). Local antibiotic guidelines were missing for 7050 (19·2%) of the 36 792 antibiotic prescriptions, and guideline compliance was 77·4%. Interpretation: The Global-PPS showed that worldwide surveillance can be accomplished with voluntary participation. It provided quantifiable measures to assess and compare the quantity and quality of antibiotic prescribing and resistance in hospital patients worldwide. These data will help to improve the quality of antibiotic prescribing through education and practice changes, particularly in low-income and middle-income countries that have no tools to monitor antibiotic prescribing in hospitals. Funding: bioMérieux.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
6
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1be2e5a3e7214aa38e21fbd1ac5e7c00
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30186-4