Infectious Diseases II
Critical care pharmacists could either have an active role as a member of a multidisciplinary antibiotic
stewardship team or serve in many of the different roles and activities of antibiotic stewardship.
Education with active intervention β Interpretation of rapid identification tests and susceptibility
testing
Guidelines and clinical pathway development. Recent IDSA guidelines recommend facility-
specific clinical practice guidelines or algorithms as an effective way of standardizing prescribing
practices.
Streamlining or de-escalation of therapy
Shortening therapy duration
ii.
Discontinuing unnecessary antimicrobials
| d. | Dose optimization |
|---|
Application of PK/PD principles. Per IDSA recommendations, PK and dose-monitoring
programs are specifically recommended for vancomycin and aminoglycosides.
ii.
Dose adjustments based on organ function
iii.
Allergy detection and assessment, in particular promotion of Ξ²-lactam skin testing when
appropriate
Parenteral to oral conversion
Recent IDSA guidelines recommend against the use of didactic education alone for stewardship.
Support from microbiology laboratory and electronic medical record system surveillance and clinical
decision support may further enhance stewardship efforts.
Prospective audit with intervention and feedback (βback-endβ strategy)
Allows flexibility and minimizes delay in administering therapy
The most successful strategy involves direct communication with treating physicians and required
documentation for acceptance of recommendation or rationale for denial.
May be resource-intensive, and prescribers may feel a loss of autonomy
Initial choices of antimicrobials may be optimized through consultation with infectious disease
experts.
Antimicrobial cycling: An example of formulary restriction in which there is a scheduled removal
and substitution of a specific antimicrobial or an antimicrobial class. It is an effort to minimize
antimicrobial selection pressures. Evidence is insufficient to suggest that antimicrobial cycling
strategies are effective. IDSA stewardship guidelines recommend against the use of antimicrobial
cycling as a stewardship strategy. The compensatory overuse of another class of antibiotics has
been reported when attempts to restrict a different class of antibiotics were implemented.
Regardless of the strategies used or the quality of clinical pathways, programmatic antibiotic stewardship
is not a substitute for clinical judgment.
Process indicators (e.g., days of therapy, provider adherence to clinical pathway, time to effective
therapy) and outcome measures (e.g., LOS, mortality, 30-day readmission) should be used to gauge
program success.
Antimicrobials can account for up to 30% of hospital pharmacy budgets, with up to 50% of antimicrobial
use being inappropriate, leading to increased cost, increased selection of resistant pathogens, and
increased selection of opportunistic infections (OIs).