Impact of an Antimicrobial Stewardship Program on the Incidence of Carbapenem Resistant Gram-Negative Bacilli: An Interrupted Time-Series Analysis

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Author
López-Viñau, Teresa
Peñalva, Germán
García-Martínez, Lucrecia
Castón, Juan José
Muñoz-Rosa, Montserrat
Cano, Ángela
Recio, Manuel
Cisneros, José Miguel
Pérez-Nadales, Elena
Rumbao Aguirre, José
García-Martínez, Elena
Salcedo, Inmaculada
del Prado, José Ramón
de la Fuente, Carmen
Martínez-Martínez, Luis
Gracia-Ahufinger, Irene
Torre-Cisneros, J.
Publisher
MDPIDate
2021Subject
antimicrobial stewardship program; carbapenems; antimicrobial resistance; carbapenemresistant Enterobacteriaceae; carbapenemasesMETS:
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Carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacilli (CR-GNB) are a critical public health threat, and carbapenem use contributes to their spread. Antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) have proven successful in reducing antimicrobial use. However, evidence on the impact of carbapenem resistance remains unclear. We evaluated the impact of a multifaceted ASP on carbapenem use and incidence of CR-GNB in a high-endemic hospital. An interrupted time-series analysis was conducted one year before and two years after starting the ASP to assess carbapenem consumption, CR-GNB incidence, death rates of sentinel events, and other variables potentially related to CR-GNB incidence. Anintense reduction in carbapenem consumption occurred after starting the intervention and was sustained two years later (relative effect −83.51%; 95% CI −87.23 to −79.79). The incidence density of CR-GNBdecreased by −0.915 cases per 1000 occupied bed days (95% CI −1.743 to −0.087). This effect was especially marked in CR-Klebsiella pneumoniae and CR-Escherichia coli, reversing the preintervention upward trend and leading to a relative reduction of −91.15% (95% CI −105.53 to −76.76) and −89.93% (95% CI −107.03 to −72.83), respectively, two years after starting the program. Death rates did not change. This ASP contributed to decreasing CR-GNB incidence through a sustained reduction in antibiotic use without increasing mortality rates.