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Prospective antimicrobial stewardship interventions by multidisciplinary teams to reduce neonatal antibiotic use in South Africa: The Neonatal Antimicrobial Stewardship (NeoAMS) study

Authors :
Angela Dramowski
Pavel Prusakov
Debra A. Goff
Adrian Brink
Nelesh P. Govender
Ama Sakoa Annor
Liezl Balfour
Adrie Bekker
Azraa Cassim
Michelle Gijzelaar
Sandi L. Holgate
Sonya Kolman
Angeliki Messina
Hafsah Tootla
Natalie Schellack
Andriette van Jaarsveld
Kessendri Reddy
Shakti Pillay
Lucinda Conradie
Anika M. van Niekerk
Tarina Bester
Pearl Alexander
Antoinette Andrews
Magdel Dippenaar
Colleen Bamford
Sharnel Brits
Pinky Chirwa
Hannelie Erasmus
Pieter Ekermans
Pebenita Gounden
Teresa Kriel
Dini Mawela
Masego Moncho
Tonia Mphuthi
Ronald Nhari
Esmita Charani
Pablo J. Sánchez
Dena van den Bergh
Source :
International Journal of Infectious Diseases, Vol 146, Iss , Pp 107158- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Background: Hospitalized neonates are vulnerable to infection and have high rates of antibiotic utilization. Methods: Fourteen South African neonatal units (seven public, seven private sector) assembled multidisciplinary teams involving neonatologists, microbiologists, pharmacists, and nurses to implement prospective audit and feedback neonatal antimicrobial stewardship (NeoAMS) interventions. The teams attended seven online training sessions. Pharmacists conducted weekday antibiotic prescription reviews in the neonatal intensive care unit and/or neonatal wards providing feedback to the clinical teams. Anonymized demographic and NeoAMS interventions data were aggregated for descriptive purposes and statistical analysis. Findings: During the 20-week NeoAMS intervention in 2022, 565 neonates were enrolled. Pharmacists evaluated seven hundred antibiotic prescription episodes; rule-out sepsis (180; 26%) and culture-negative sepsis (138; 20%) were the most frequent indications for antibiotic prescription. For infection episodes with an identified pathogen, only 51% (116/229) of empiric treatments provided adequate antimicrobial coverage. Pharmacists recommended 437 NeoAMS interventions (0·6 per antibiotic prescription episode), with antibiotic discontinuation (42%), therapeutic drug monitoring (17%), and dosing (15%) recommendations most frequent. Neonatal clinicians’ acceptance rates for AMS recommendations were high (338; 77%). Mean antibiotic length of therapy decreased by 24% from 9·1 to 6·9 days (0·1 day decrease per intervention week; P = 0·001), with the greatest decline in length of therapy for culture-negative sepsis (8·2 days (95% CI 5·7-11·7) to 5·9 days (95% CI 4·6-7·5); P = 0·032). Interpretation: This neonatal AMS programme was successfully implemented in heterogenous and resource-limited settings. Pharmacist-recommended AMS interventions had high rates of clinician acceptance. The NeoAMS intervention significantly reduced neonatal antibiotic use, particularly for culture-negative sepsis. Funding: A grant from Merck provided partial support.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
12019712
Volume :
146
Issue :
107158-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.bfb98444969d45bd91d568ac1988fae6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2024.107158