Antimicrobial stewardship in daily practice: managing an important resource Flashcards
1
Q
What is antimicrobial stewardship?
A
“a collection of inventions geared toward optimizing the prescribing of anti-microbials, and includes the appropriate selection, dosing, route, and duration of antimicrobial therapy with the goal of optimizing patient outcomes and decreasing adverse events related to antimicrobial therapy”
2
Q
When should testing occur before prescribing empiric therapy?
A
In well children:
- AOM (wait 24-48h)
- Pharyngitis (swab first)
- Potential lobar pneumonia (CXR)
3
Q
What are some principles of antimicrobial stewardship?
A
- Use clinical judgment and test judicially
- Treat infection, not contamination
- Take a careful history of potential antibiotic side effects and, if possible, confirm an antimicrobial allergy
- Utilize local, age-specific antibiograms to guide antibiotic choices
- Narrow the spectrum of antimicrobials when a causative organism is identified
- Optimize the dosing of antimicrobials to obtain maximal benefit
- Use the shortest recommended course of therapy for uncomplicated infections
- Take care not to change or prolong antimicrobial therapy unnecessarily
- promote vaccination to reduce likelihood of clinical disease
4
Q
What is the cross-reactivity to cephalosporins if a patient has an IgE mediated allergy to pencillin?
A
2%
5
Q
What are other CPS suggestions for antimicrobial stewardship?
A
- Always document child’s vital signs, physical examination and why you are prescribing antibiotics in your note
- In well children schedule clinical f/u instead of starting antibiotics
- Detail a suspected drug reactions and consider allergy consult
- Ensure minimum diagnostic criteria for diagnosis of UTI are met before starting antibiotics and always send a urine culture
- Treat infectious syndromes causes by Strep pneumo or GAS w/ penicillin not macrolides
- Treat S. aureus use cloxacillin or cephalexin unless high risk for MRSA then treat w/ drainage and septra PO or vanco IVif severe
- Do not perform throat cultures on children w/ sore throat and cold symptoms as likely positive GAS would be carrier
- Always use the correct weight based dose and optimize the frequency and duration
- Most outpatient antibiotic prescriptions should be for 5-7d
- CAP treat w/ ampicillin IV or amoxicillin PO (TID)
- CAP w/ mycoplasma or chlamydia presentations are the only ones who should be treated w/ a macrolide
- CXR should be performed to diagnose pneumonia before starting antibiotics
- Children w/ wheezing almost never need antibotics
- Know the typical bacteria that cause common outpatients
- Most skin and soft tissue infections are due to S. aureus or GAS and respond to cephalexin
- If site is draining or purulent culture it
- Minor skin and wound infections treat with topical therapy