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Antibiotic Stewardship in the Intensive Care Unit. An Official American Thoracic Society Workshop Report in Collaboration with the AACN, CHEST, CDC, and SCCM

Authors :
Mark L. Metersky
Sandra L. Kane-Gill
Charles S. Dela Cruz
Scott E. Evans
Nancy Munro
Arjun Srinivasan
Scott R. Evans
Jean Chastre
Christina Vazquez Guillamet
Sandra M. Swoboda
Margaret M. Ecklund
Grant W. Waterer
Steven Q. Simpson
Lauri A. Hicks
Michael S. Niederman
Curtis N. Sessler
Melissa L. Hutchinson
Ivor S. Douglas
Anthony T Gerlach
Philip S. Barie
Curtis H. Weiss
Robert C. Hyzy
Erika D. Lease
Michael D. Howell
Richard G. Wunderink
Marcos I. Restrepo
Source :
Annals of the American Thoracic Society
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Intensive care units (ICUs) are an appropriate focus of antibiotic stewardship program efforts because a large proportion of any hospital's use of parenteral antibiotics, especially broad-spectrum, occurs in the ICU. Given the importance of antibiotic stewardship for critically ill patients and the importance of critical care practitioners as the front line for antibiotic stewardship, a workshop was convened to specifically address barriers to antibiotic stewardship in the ICU and discuss tactics to overcome these. The working definition of antibiotic stewardship is "the right drug at the right time and the right dose for the right bug for the right duration." A major emphasis was that antibiotic stewardship should be a core competency of critical care clinicians. Fear of pathogens that are not covered by empirical antibiotics is a major driver of excessively broad-spectrum therapy in critically ill patients. Better diagnostics and outcome data can address this fear and expand efforts to narrow or shorten therapy. Greater awareness of the substantial adverse effects of antibiotics should be emphasized and is an important counterargument to broad-spectrum therapy in individual low-risk patients. Optimal antibiotic stewardship should not focus solely on reducing antibiotic use or ensuring compliance with guidelines. Instead, it should enhance care both for individual patients (by improving and individualizing their choice of antibiotic) and for the ICU population as a whole. Opportunities for antibiotic stewardship in common ICU infections, including community- and hospital-acquired pneumonia and sepsis, are discussed. Intensivists can partner with antibiotic stewardship programs to address barriers and improve patient care.

Details

ISSN :
23256621
Volume :
17
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of the American Thoracic Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e5b61747d1bf968e1405cf49e948a0a