Explicit definitions of potentially inappropriate prescriptions of antibiotics in hospitalized older patients - 17/06/22
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on behalf of the
GInGer (Groupe infectio-gériatrie
intergroupeSPILF [Société de pathologie infectieuse de langue française]
–SFGG [Société française de gériatrie et gérontologie])
Highlights |
• | The use of explicit criteria for potentially inappropriate prescriptions (PIPs) increases the appropriateness of prescriptions. |
• | Explicit definitions of antibiotic PIPs have not previously been listed. |
• | This study provides 65 new proposals for explicit definitions of antibiotic PIPs. |
• | These definitions might help to reduce inappropriate prescriptions of antibiotics. |
• | This explicit approach might be useful to fight against antimicrobial resistance. |
Abstract |
Context |
The use of explicit definitions of potentially inappropriate prescriptions of antibiotics (antibiotic PIPs) might constitute an innovative means to fight against antimicrobial resistance. Explicit definitions of PIPs can reduce the rate of inappropriate prescriptions, but explicit definitions of antibiotic PIPs in geriatric medicine are currently lacking. The objective of the study was to develop explicit definitions of antibiotic PIPs for hospitalized older patients.
Method |
We performed a qualitative study of focus groups involving geriatricians and infectious disease specialists. The study complied with the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research. Transcripts of audio recordings were analyzed in a two-step independent reviewing process. The exact wording of the definitions was validated by a steering committee, an independent expert group, and the focus group participants.
Results |
The four focus groups comprised 28 stakeholders. Our analysis identified 65 explicit definitions of antibiotic PIPs: 47 (73%) concerned misuse, 15 (23%) concerned overuse and three (5%) concerned underuse. Most definitions were related to critically important antibiotics: 11 (17%) for fluoroquinolones, eight (12%) for amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, eight (12%) for cephalosporins, seven (11%) for aminoglycosides, and five (8%) for carbapenems.
Conclusion |
To address the public health challenge of antimicrobial resistance, our study generated explicit definitions for antibiotic PIPs in older patients. We intend to refine and to validate these definitions through a national Delphi survey; the resulting consensus might provide key messages for prescribers and open up perspectives for reducing the incidence of antibiotic PIPs.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Antimicrobial resistance, Elderly, Inappropriate prescribing, Antibiotic stewardship, Hospital setting
Plan
Vol 52 - N° 4
P. 214-222 - juin 2022 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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