1. Pharmacist-led improvement in perioperative antibiotic selection for patients with a penicillin allergy label.
- Author
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Stonerock D, Hallo-Carrasco A, Edwards M, Porter SB, Epps KL, and Gonzalez-Estrada A
- Subjects
- Humans, Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Cefazolin adverse effects, Pharmacists, Pilot Projects, Antibiotic Prophylaxis adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Penicillins adverse effects, beta-Lactams adverse effects, Surgical Wound Infection epidemiology, Surgical Wound Infection prevention & control, Drug Hypersensitivity epidemiology, Drug Hypersensitivity etiology, Drug Hypersensitivity prevention & control, Hypersensitivity drug therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Surgical patients with a penicillin allergy label (PAL) are less likely to receive β-lactams for surgical site infection (SSI) prophylaxis and more likely to receive second-line antibiotics, which may increase the risk of SSI, drug toxicities, and associated costs. We assessed the impact of implementing a pharmacist-led quality improvement project to increase the use of cefazolin as a first-line agent in this population., Summary: After implementation of a pilot project in December 2021, all patients with a PAL and orders for preoperative antibiotics were risk stratified into high- or low-risk categories by a pharmacist. For the low-risk group, cefazolin was recommended. For the high-risk group, cefazolin was avoided and a second-line agent was administered. Our analysis compared 422 preintervention patients (August 15 to November 15, 2021) to 492 postintervention patients (December 15 to March 15, 2022). During the postintervention period, β-lactam usage increased (from 12.6% to 37.8%, P < 0.001), while usage of vancomycin (45.5% vs 29.5%, P < 0.001) and other second-line antibiotics (87.4% vs 62.2%, P < 0.001) declined. There were no adverse reactions reported in the preintervention cohort, with 2 potential adverse reactions reported after the intervention (0% vs 0.4%, P = 0.190). Medication costs based on claims data were 50% to 80% lower for patients receiving cefazolin., Conclusion: In our cohort, a pharmacy-led antibiotic selection algorithm for patients with a PAL receiving perioperative antimicrobial prophylaxis resulted in increased use of β-lactam antibiotics, decreased use of second-line antibiotics, and decreased costs without a significant change in the incidence of adverse reactions., (© American Society of Health-System Pharmacists 2023. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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