Back to Search Start Over

Survey of Surgical Infections Currently Known (SOSICK): A Multicenter Examination of Antimicrobial Use from the Surgical Infection Society Scientific Studies Committee

Authors :
Kim Overton
Raul Coimbra
Daniel L. Dent
Claudio F. Nunes
Yanumei Li
Pamela A. Lipsett
Jonathan P. Meizoso
Laura Hennessy
Juan J. Blondet
Charles A. Adams
Wael N. Yacoub
Jeffrey A. Claridge
Fred A. Luchette
Orla N. Smith
Ton That Hieu
Gregory J. Beilman
Chet A. Morrison
Marline Santos
Shirin Towfigh
Shaleagh Earl
Patrick Blute
Nicholas Namias
David H. Livingston
Walter L. Biffl
John E. Mazuski
Anthony T Gerlach
Jeffrey G. Chipman
Susan A. Brundage
Joseph Cuschieri
Jessica Bollinger
Charles H. Cook
Charles J. Yowler
Sandy Swoboda
Mary Ann Purtill
Jeanne Lee
Lynn Derting
Source :
Surgical Infections. 9:509-514
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2008.

Abstract

The Scientific Studies Committee of the Surgical Infection Society undertook the present study to examine the prevalence of and indications for antimicrobial use in intensive care units where members of the Society practice.Information and data collection sheets were posted on the Internet for download by members interested in participating. All centers were required to obtain approval from their local human subjects research office or equivalent. A one-week time was set during which the center could collect information on any one day, at the center's convenience. Data collection sheets were then sent to the lead author for analysis. Seventeen centers reported data for 371 patients in 22 intensive care units.Trauma and general surgical patients comprised 224 of the patients (60%). The indications for anti-infective agents were prophylactic (22%), empiric (27%), therapeutic with known pathogen (41%), therapeutic without known pathogen (e.g., cellulitis) (4%), insistence of influential practitioner (4%), or non-anti-infective purposes (e.g., erythromycin for gastric motility) (2%). Only 44%, 29%, and 54% of the orders for prophylactic, empiric, and therapeutic antibiotics, respectively, had date-certain stop dates. The antimicrobial drugs most commonly used were vancomycin, piperacillin-tazobactam, and fluconazole.Most patients were receiving antimicrobial agents. Polypharmacy was common. Most patients did not have a date-certain stop date. This study sets the benchmark for future study regarding antibiotic prescribing behavior in surgical intensive care units.

Details

ISSN :
15578674 and 10962964
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgical Infections
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bf684c1b8400108329f25164bf8cde4e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/sur.2007.078