Background: In 2018, the Clinical Microbiology Laboratory at our institution adopted updated daptomycin -susceptible dose-dependent breakpoints. While the introduction of susceptible dose-dependent (SDD) was intended to guide practice toward optimal dosing, the understanding and application of daptomycin SDD breakpoints for enterococci were unknown.
Methods: This mixed-methods study combined a clinician survey with a retrospective pre-post prescribing analysis. An 8-question survey was distributed to infectious diseases (ID) and internal medicine (IM) clinicians. A retrospective chart review of hospitalized adults with infections due to spp. was conducted before (pre-SDD) and after (post-SDD) adoption of SDD reporting for enterococci.
Results: Survey response rates were 40 of 98 (41%) for IM and 22 of 34 (65%) for ID clinicians. ID clinicians scored significantly higher than IM clinicians in knowledge of SDD. Chart review of 474 patients (225 pre- vs 249 post-SDD) showed that daptomycin dosage following susceptibility testing was significantly higher post-SDD compared with pre-SDD (8.5 mg/kg vs 6.4 mg/kg; < .001) with no difference in empiric dosing (6.3 mg/kg vs 6.2 mg/kg; = .67). Definitive daptomycin use varied between the pre- and post-SDD periods (35.1% vs 16.9%; < .001).
Conclusions: The survey revealed that ID clinicians placed more importance on and had more confidence in the SDD category over IM clinicians. SDD reporting was associated with a change in definitive daptomycin dosing. ID specialist involvement is recommended in the care of infections due to enterococci for which daptomycin is reported as SDD given their expertise.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8754381 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab611 | DOI Listing |
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