Infection, Bacterial Clinical Trial
Official title:
Antimicrobial Use and Stewardship in an Outpatient Hemodialysis Unit
This quality improvement study will assess the antimicrobial use and prescribing practices of hospital and community prescribers for the ambulatory hemodialysis (HD) population in an urban academic outpatient HD unit in Ontario. Currently, in the outpatient HD unit at Toronto General Hospital (TGH), it is the standard of care for the patients to be screened on a weekly basis by the nephrology care team for the use of any oral or intravenous antimicrobials. Patient charts, pharmacy patient profiles and electronic medical records for these patients from September 1 2016 - April 30 2017 will be retrospectively reviewed in order to characterize antimicrobial use and its concordance with available clinical guidelines and antimicrobial stewardship principles described by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The primary objective of the study is to determine the prevalence of antimicrobial use in an ambulatory HD population. The secondary objective of the study is to determine the congruence of prescribed antimicrobial regimens with available clinical guidelines and antimicrobial stewardship principles described by the CDC. It is hypothesized that antimicrobial use among HD patients will be common and that antimicrobial prescribing practices are not congruent with recommendations from published clinical guidelines and antimicrobial stewardship principles for a significant proportion of patients included in the retrospective review. Descriptive analysis of the data will summarize the findings. Future research will build upon the results of this project, and may include the development of interventions that target gaps in knowledge and prescribing behaviours of prescribers who provide care to the ambulatory HD population.
Description of Study:
Patients who make up the ambulatory hemodialysis (HD) population at Toronto General Hospital
(TGH) are interviewed on a weekly basis about their antimicrobial use during the nursing-led
bedside huddle as part of the standard of care. These huddles take place daily during each of
the four HD shifts: morning, afternoon, evening and nocturnal. During the huddle the nurse or
patient care coordinator asks the patient if they have been prescribed an oral or intravenous
antimicrobial by a hospital or community prescriber in the past 7 days. A Best Possible
Medication History (BPMH) is completed by a HD Pharmacy team member for all patients who
stated they have started a new antimicrobial. A BPMH is a patient's medication history which
is defined as "a systematic process of interviewing the patient/family", and "a review of at
least one other reliable source of information" (e.g., dispensing pharmacy records, hospital
discharge records etc.) to confirm medication use. The BPMH is part of routine care in the HD
unit and obtained at regular intervals (e.g., when a medication is started, changed or
discontinued) to ensure the most accurate medication history is available. The BPMH
containing information about the antimicrobial treatment is documented in the patient's
medical chart, as well as in the electronic pharmacy patient profile. There will be no
disruption to the current pharmacy practice and workflow in the HD unit by this study.
At the end of the data collection period, a panel compromising of a pharmacy resident,
antimicrobial stewardship pharmacist, nephrology pharmacist, nurse practitioner and
nephrologist will adjudicate each antimicrobial prescription with a presumed indication for
congruence with available clinical guidelines and antimicrobial principles described by CDC.
Each antimicrobial regimen will be categorized as congruent or non-congruent; any regimen for
which there is inadequate or unavailable documentation in support of congruence will be
classified as unknown congruence. The primary tool for assessing antimicrobial therapy will
be against antimicrobial stewardship best practices guiding principles established by CDC,
supplemented by applicable guidelines for each site of suspected infection published by major
infectious disease and nephrology societies. Evidence-based resources for drug dosing in
renal failure will be used to determine whether the prescribed antimicrobial regimen is
consistent with literature-based dosing recommendations. The prescription will be assessed
for types of stewardship-discordant prescribing that will be defined based on general
stewardship principles a priori such as the following:
i) antimicrobial regimen has incorrect dose/route/frequency for intended infectious syndrome,
pathogens and/or patient factors ii) length of treatment too short (discontinuation before
adequate source control or clinical stability) or too long (prolonged therapy despite
documented microbiologic clearance or resolution of symptoms) iii) empiric therapy spectrum
too broad or narrow considering possible causative pathogens iv) antimicrobial therapy not
tailored/streamlined/de-escalated for microbiology results v) non-infectious syndrome
Number of subjects:
The outpatient HD unit at TGH has a typical census of 300 patients. It is estimated that
approximately 300 patient charts will be identified for inclusion as this study will be a
non-comparative analysis of all patients admitted to the HD unit.
Statistics:
Data will be tabulated and analyzed using Microsoft Excel software. Descriptive statistics
will be used to analyze the data. Means and standard deviations, as well as counts and
proportions will be calculated for baseline parameters and relevant endpoints as appropriate.
No interim analyses of the data are anticipated.
Procedure for accounting for missing, unused, and spurious data:
A patient's medical chart and pharmacy patient profile are comprehensive for obtaining a
patient's medication history and therefore missing data should not be a concern. If this
issue arises all available data sources will be exhausted (e.g., electronic patient record,
pharmacy patient profiles).
Quality Assurance:
All data will be collected by the designated study team member using a data collection sheet
and following a systematic approach approved by the project team. Raw data will be validated
and reviewed by the project team following the completion of data collection and prior to
data analysis.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT05846399 -
CAT BITE Antibiotic Prophylaxis for the Hand/Forearm (CATBITE)
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05904535 -
Novel Diagnostic Methods to Identify External Ventricular Drain Associated Infections
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT04075344 -
Effect of a Infection Control Program on the Reduction of Bacterial Contamination on NG Tube Feeding in RCHEs
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05333133 -
High Calorie Formula Intervention on Weight, Length Increment, Total Lymphocyte Counts, TNF-alpha and IGF-1 in Failure to Thrive Children
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05950984 -
Medical Device (MD) Derived Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters for Vancomycin (MD-PK)
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06283433 -
A Dried Blood Spot Sampling Method for Vancomycin and Creatinine Monitoring for OPAT
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06178822 -
Towards Novel BIOmarkers to Diagnose SEPsis on the Emergency Room
|
||
Completed |
NCT03688321 -
Probiotic on Prevention of GBS Vaginal Infection During Pregnancy
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03244917 -
Trial to Reduce Antimicrobial Use In Nursing Home Residents With Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04450680 -
Beta-lactam Therapeutic Drug Monitoring in Singapore
|
||
Completed |
NCT05686577 -
How to Reduce Unnecessary Blood Cultures: Construction and Validation of a Predictive Score for Blood Culture Positivity in Intensive Care
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06093269 -
Pharmacokinetics Study of Cefazolin in Hemodialysis (CEFAZODIAL)
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05587283 -
Safety, Tolerability, and Acceptability Study of Intravaginal Administration of LABTHERA-001 Capsules in Healthy Women
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT03752424 -
Topical Silver Nanoparticles for Microbial Activity
|
Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT04440631 -
Gut Microbiome of Patients Undergoing Antibiotic Therapy for Orthopedic Device-related Infection
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05150015 -
ElastoMeric Infusion Pumps for Hospital AntibioTICs
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03816956 -
Adjunctive Therapy to Antibiotics in the Treatment of S. Aureus Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia With AR-301
|
Phase 3 | |
Terminated |
NCT03555981 -
Early Kangaroo Mother Care in Gambian Hospitalised Unstable Neonates
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03133312 -
Chlorhexidine Gluconate Versus Povidone-Iodine as Vaginal Preparation Antiseptics Prior to Cesarean Delivery
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04800575 -
Comparison of Sterile Gauze and Semi-permeable Film Dressing for Hemodialysis Central Venous Catheter
|
N/A |