Antibiotic usage in community-acquired infections in hospitals in Taiwan.

J Formos Med Assoc

Division of Clinical Research, National Health Research Institutes, Memorial Hospital, 128 Yen-Chiu-Yuan Road, Section 2, Taipei, Taiwan.

Published: January 2002

Background And Purpose: Using an epidemiologically meaningful in-hospital population with community-acquired infections, we evaluated antibiotic therapy in terms of indication and choice of antibiotic and microbiologic work-up.

Methods: Infectious disease specialists evaluated charts of 436 patients from 9 hospitals and selected those who received antibiotics within 3 days of admission. Each antibiotic prescribed was marked for appropriateness of indication and choice. Microbiologic isolates were evaluated for their clinical significance.

Results: The most common infections were in the lower respiratory tract (46.1%). Each patient received a mean of 2.25 antibiotics for 8.1 +/- 6.4 days. Of the 975 courses of antibiotics given in the study period, indication and choice were correct in 37.4% and unsatisfactory in 14.5%. The vast majority of antibiotics used (79.2%) were first-line antibiotics--usually first-generation cephalosporins, aminoglycosides, and aminopenicillins. Most patients (66%) had a microbiology laboratory work-up, but only 37.4% were judged by evaluators to have a meaningful microbiologic diagnosis. Among the 201 patients with lower respiratory tract infections, 105 (52.2%) had a diagnosis of pneumonia. A positive isolate was recovered in 30 (28.6%) patients, and most of these isolates (20, 68.7%) were aerobic gram-negative rods. There were three positive blood cultures but none grew Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Conclusions: Antibiotics were used excessively in number and duration. The microbiologic work-up had little effect on the indication and choice of antibiotics. Community-acquired pneumonia differed markedly from that in Western countries in that only 3.3% were caused by S. pneumoniae.

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