학술논문

1011. Hospital Antibiogram Variation within a Veterans Affairs (VA) Regional Network.
Document Type
Article
Source
Open Forum Infectious Diseases. 2019 Supplement, Vol. 6, pS355-S356. 2p.
Subject
*PEARSON correlation (Statistics)
*DRUG resistance in bacteria
*VETERANS' hospitals
*DATA warehousing
*VETERANS
Language
ISSN
2328-8957
Abstract
Background VISN 22 is comprised of eight VA hospitals serving Southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico. The VISN 22 Antimicrobial Stewardship Workgroup formed in November 2018 with the purpose of sharing strong practices and program strategies. We compared antibiogram compilation strategies and antimicrobial susceptibilities and correlated antimicrobial susceptibilities for Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli with inpatient and outpatient antibiotic use. Methods 2018 antibiograms were collected from each hospital. Antibiotic utilization rates (antibiotic days per 1000 patient-days present) were extracted from VA Corporate Data Warehouse data. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated between 2018 utilization of specific agents and P. aeruginosa and E. coli susceptibilities to those agents at each facility. Results Antibiograms varied according to authorship (microbiology and/or infectious diseases), reporting frequency, rules regarding isolate reporting, and location and specimen specificity (Table 1). Facilities reported at least 90% susceptibility to a median of 3 antibiotics (range 1 to 5) for P. aeruginosa and 5 antibiotics (range 1 to 7) for E. coli. The strongest negative correlations between antimicrobial use and susceptibility were observed for meropenem/imipenem (-0.43) and piperacillin–tazobactam (-0.41) with P. aeruginosa and piperacillin–tazobactam (-0.23) and fluoroquinolones (-0.21) with E. coli. A moderate negative correlation was observed between outpatient fluoroquinolone prescriptions per 1000 patients and E. coli susceptibility (-0.24). Conclusion Antibiogram composition is variable across VISN 22; not all reporting is consistent with CLSI recommendations. There was a modest correlation between some categories of antimicrobial use and resistance in P. aeruginosa and E. coli. Sharing antibiogram and antibiotic utilization data are helpful in developing antimicrobial stewardship strategies especially as we examine those hospitals with lower rates of resistance and antibiotic use. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]