AI Article Synopsis

  • Antifungal stewardship is an under-researched area within antimicrobial stewardship programs, especially in developing countries.
  • The study surveyed antifungal prescription practices in a tertiary center, revealing a low overall prevalence of antifungal prescriptions (2.42%), with higher usage among children and specific medical units, notably haematology-oncology.
  • Results showed that common antifungals prescribed included amphotericin B and fluconazole, with significant instances of inappropriate prescriptions (25.1%) primarily due to wrong choices and dosages, highlighting the need for better training in antifungal use amidst affordability challenges.

Article Abstract

Background: Antifungal stewardship is a less explored component of antimicrobial stewardship programmes, especially in developing countries.

Objective: We aimed to determine antifungal prescription practices in a tertiary centre of a developing country to identify the challenges for antifungal stewardship programmes.

Methods: Four single-day point prevalent surveys were performed in inpatient units and data were collected from medical records. Antifungal use was recorded in terms of consumption, therapeutic strategies and appropriateness.

Results: We found a 2.42%-point prevalence of antifungal prescriptions. Antifungal use was higher in children than adults (4.1% vs. 2.03%), medical than surgical units (3.7% vs. 1.24%) and ICUs than general wards (5.8% vs. 1.9%). The highest antifungal use was observed in the haematology-oncology units (29.3%) followed by emergency (16.2%) and gastroenterology units (11.6%). Among 215 prescriptions, amphotericin B was the most commonly prescribed (50.2%) followed by fluconazole (31.6%). The targeted antifungal therapy was practised more commonly (31.5%) than empiric (29.1%), pre-emptive (22.6%) and prophylactic (16.8%) therapy. Amphotericin B was commonly used for pre-emptive (p = .001) and targeted (p = .049) therapy, while fluconazole (p = .001) and voriconazole (p = .011) for prophylaxis. The prescriptions were inappropriate in 25.1% due to the wrong choice of antifungal (44.4%), indication (27.7%) and dosage (24%). The overall mean antifungal consumption was 2.71 DDD/1000 PD and 8.96 DOT/1000 PD.

Conclusions: We report here the low prevalence of antifungal use at a tertiary care centre in a developing country. Though training for antifungal use would be important for antifungal stewardship, the challenge would remain with the affordability of antifungals.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/myc.13514DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

antifungal
14
developing country
12
antifungal stewardship
12
antifungal prescription
8
prescription practices
8
tertiary care
8
centre developing
8
prevalence antifungal
8
amphotericin commonly
8
practices consumption
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!