Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care Unit
:The objective of the study was to evaluate the capacity of GERH<sup>®</sup>-derived local resistance maps (LRMs) to predict antibiotic susceptibility profiles and recommend the appropriate empirical treatment for ICU patients with nosocomial infection. Data gathered between 2007 and 201...
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doaj-25e0fb5df4c24faeb99053803ab06c6b2020-11-25T03:26:54ZengMDPI AGAntibiotics2079-63822020-08-01952152110.3390/antibiotics9080521Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care UnitPaola Navarro-Gomez0Jose Gutierrez-Fernandez1Manuel Angel Rodriguez-Maresca2Maria Carmen Olvera-Porcel3Antonio Sorlozano-Puerto4Laboratory Clinical Management Unit, Torrecardenas Hospital Complex, 04009 Almeria, SpainDepartment of Microbiology, School of Medicine and PhD Program in Clinical Medicine and Public Health, University of Granada-ibs, 18016 Granada, SpainLaboratory Clinical Management Unit, Torrecardenas Hospital Complex, 04009 Almeria, SpainAndalusian Public Foundation for biomedical research in eastern Andalusia, Alejandro Otero-FIBAO, Torrecardenas Hospital Complex, 04009 Almeria, SpainDepartment of Microbiology, School of Medicine and PhD Program in Clinical Medicine and Public Health, University of Granada-ibs, 18016 Granada, Spain:The objective of the study was to evaluate the capacity of GERH<sup>®</sup>-derived local resistance maps (LRMs) to predict antibiotic susceptibility profiles and recommend the appropriate empirical treatment for ICU patients with nosocomial infection. Data gathered between 2007 and 2016 were retrospectively studied to compare susceptibility information from antibiograms of microorganisms isolated in blood cultures, lower respiratory tract samples, and urine samples from all ICU patients meeting clinical criteria for infection with the susceptibility mapped by LRMs for these bacterial species. Susceptibility described by LRMs was concordant with in vitro study results in 73.9% of cases. The LRM-predicted outcome agreed with the antibiogram result in >90% of cases infected with the bacteria for which GERH<sup>®</sup> offers data on susceptibility to daptomycin, vancomycin, teicoplanin, linezolid, and rifampicin. Full adherence to LRM recommendations would have improved the percentage adequacy of empirical prescriptions by 2.2% for lower respiratory tract infections (p = 0.018), 3.1% for bacteremia (p = 0.07), and 5.3% for urinary tract infections (p = 0.142). LRMs may moderately improve the adequacy of empirical antibiotic therapy, especially for lower respiratory tract infections. LRMs recommend appropriate prescriptions in approximately 50% of cases but are less useful in patients with bacteremia or urinary tract infection.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6382/9/8/521intensive care unitcomputerized clinical decision support systemantibiotics |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Paola Navarro-Gomez Jose Gutierrez-Fernandez Manuel Angel Rodriguez-Maresca Maria Carmen Olvera-Porcel Antonio Sorlozano-Puerto |
spellingShingle |
Paola Navarro-Gomez Jose Gutierrez-Fernandez Manuel Angel Rodriguez-Maresca Maria Carmen Olvera-Porcel Antonio Sorlozano-Puerto Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care Unit Antibiotics intensive care unit computerized clinical decision support system antibiotics |
author_facet |
Paola Navarro-Gomez Jose Gutierrez-Fernandez Manuel Angel Rodriguez-Maresca Maria Carmen Olvera-Porcel Antonio Sorlozano-Puerto |
author_sort |
Paola Navarro-Gomez |
title |
Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care Unit |
title_short |
Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care Unit |
title_full |
Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care Unit |
title_fullStr |
Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care Unit |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effectiveness of Electronic Guidelines (GERH<sup>®</sup>) to Improve the Clinical Use of Antibiotics in an Intensive Care Unit |
title_sort |
effectiveness of electronic guidelines (gerh<sup>®</sup>) to improve the clinical use of antibiotics in an intensive care unit |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Antibiotics |
issn |
2079-6382 |
publishDate |
2020-08-01 |
description |
:The objective of the study was to evaluate the capacity of GERH<sup>®</sup>-derived local resistance maps (LRMs) to predict antibiotic susceptibility profiles and recommend the appropriate empirical treatment for ICU patients with nosocomial infection. Data gathered between 2007 and 2016 were retrospectively studied to compare susceptibility information from antibiograms of microorganisms isolated in blood cultures, lower respiratory tract samples, and urine samples from all ICU patients meeting clinical criteria for infection with the susceptibility mapped by LRMs for these bacterial species. Susceptibility described by LRMs was concordant with in vitro study results in 73.9% of cases. The LRM-predicted outcome agreed with the antibiogram result in >90% of cases infected with the bacteria for which GERH<sup>®</sup> offers data on susceptibility to daptomycin, vancomycin, teicoplanin, linezolid, and rifampicin. Full adherence to LRM recommendations would have improved the percentage adequacy of empirical prescriptions by 2.2% for lower respiratory tract infections (p = 0.018), 3.1% for bacteremia (p = 0.07), and 5.3% for urinary tract infections (p = 0.142). LRMs may moderately improve the adequacy of empirical antibiotic therapy, especially for lower respiratory tract infections. LRMs recommend appropriate prescriptions in approximately 50% of cases but are less useful in patients with bacteremia or urinary tract infection. |
topic |
intensive care unit computerized clinical decision support system antibiotics |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6382/9/8/521 |
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