Global-PPS targets for antimicrobial stewardship in paediatric patients at hospitals in Sanandaj, Western Iran, compared with Southeast Asian and European hospitals.

J Glob Antimicrob Resist

Laboratory of Medical Microbiology, Vaccine & Infectious Disease Institute, University of Antwerp, Faculty of Medicine and Health Science, Antwerp, Belgium.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed antimicrobial prescribing patterns in children and neonates at three hospitals in Sanandaj, Iran, comparing the data to benchmarks from Southeast Asia and Europe.
  • In Sanandaj, a significantly higher percentage of patients received antimicrobials (74.9% in neonates) compared to Southeast Asia (56.9%) and Europe (28.6%), with common misuse of broad-spectrum antibiotics like ceftriaxone and prolonged usage for surgical prophylaxis.
  • The findings highlight an urgent need for improved antibiotic stewardship programs in Sanandaj to address the high rates of empirical prescribing and enhance diagnostic capabilities.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Point prevalence surveys (PPS) provide valuable data on patterns of hospital antimicrobial administration. To identify quality improvement indicators, we evaluated antimicrobial prescribing patterns in children and neonates admitted to three referral centres in Sanandaj, Western Iran, and compared these with Southeast Asian and European paediatric benchmark data.

Methods: The standardised Global-PPS was performed to assess antimicrobial use in Southeast Asia, including Sanandaj and European hospitals, in 2019.

Results: Of the 4118, 2915, and 443 paediatric patients enrolled in Southeast Asian, European and Sanandaj hospitals, 2342 (56.9%), 833 (28.6%) and 332 (74.9%), respectively, received at least one antimicrobial in 2019. The most administered antibiotics in neonates were ampicillin in Southeast Asia (30.3%) and Sanandaj (41.5%, often in combination with cefotaxime (29.0%)), compared with amoxicillin in Europe (20.0%). In children, ceftriaxone was most prescribed in Sanandaj (62.4%) and Southeast Asia (20.5%) as opposed to amoxicillin (11.8%) in Europe. Twice as many Watch antibiotics (83.0%) were prescribed on paediatric wards in Sanandaj compared with European paediatric wards (41.1%). All antimicrobials in Sanandaj hospitals were prescribed empirically, and prolonged surgical prophylaxis was common (75.5%).

Conclusion: The high prevalence of antibiotic prescribing, high empirical therapies, and poor outcomes for antibiotic quality indicators strongly suggest the urgent need for an antibiotic stewardship program in Sanandaj hospitals, where improved diagnostic laboratory capacity and reconsideration of training may be good targets for intervention in their hospitals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jgar.2024.01.011DOI Listing

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