A multifaceted antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) intervention in the hematology department of a French hospital was associated with a significant decrease in overall antibiotic consumption in patients with blood cancer, researchers reported last week in Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control.
The intervention, implemented in November 2021 in the hematology department of an 1,800-bed university hospital in Nice, involved new local antibiotic therapy guidelines for patients with febrile neutropenia, which is common in patients who have malignant blood cancer and are undergoing intensive chemotherapy. It also included educational meetings with medical residents, patient-level review of all antibiotic prescriptions conducted twice a week with the hematology and AMS teams, and patient-specific antibiotic recommendations by the AMS team. To assess the impact of the intervention, researchers at the hospital compared overall antibiotic consumption during hospital stay in the intervention and pre-intervention periods.
Comparing 57 admissions in the intervention period with 56 in the pre-intervention period, the researchers found a significant decline in overall antibiotic consumption (median 20 days of therapy [DOT] per 1,000 hospital days vs 28 days), carbapenem consumption (median DOT 5.5 vs 9 days), and anti-resistant gram-positive agent consumption (median DOT 8 vs 11.5 days). No statistical difference was observed in the rates of intensive care unit admission (9% in each period) and 30-day mortality (5% vs 0%).
Collaborative approach
The study authors say the decline in overall antibiotic consumption was related to the high application of de-escalation and discontinuation of empiric antibiotic therapy during the intervention period (77%, compared with 8% in the pre-intervention period), which they attribute to the AMS intervention's collaborative approach, regular face-to-face meetings, and ongoing feedback.
"These results suggest that AMS interventions, based on multidisciplinary collaboration and personalized clinical recommendations, are a safe and effective tool to optimize the quality of antibiotic prescribing and fever management in high-risk neutropenic patients," they wrote.