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Empiric Vancomycin Reduction in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

Authors :
Cheryl L. Sargel
Mariana M. Lanata
Todd Karsies
Jessica Tansmore
Nathaniel Gallup
Joshua R. Watson
Don Buckingham
Alejandro Diaz
Shaina Hecht
Aspasia Katragkou
Source :
Pediatrics. 148
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND At our institution, empirical vancomycin is overused in children with suspected bacterial community-acquired infections (CAIs) admitted to the PICU because of high community rates of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Our goal was to reduce unnecessary vancomycin use for CAIs in the PICU. METHODS Empirical PICU vancomycin indications for suspected CAIs were developed by using epidemiological risk factors for MRSA. We aimed to reduce empirical PICU vancomycin use in CAIs by 30%. After retrospectively testing, the indications were implemented and monthly PICU empirical vancomycin use during baseline (May 2017–April 2018) and postintervention (May 2018–July 2019) periods. Education was provided to PICU providers, vancomycin indications were posted, and the antibiotic order set was revised. Statistical process control methods tracked improvement over time. Proven S aureus infections for which vancomycin was not empirically prescribed and linezolid or clindamycin use were balancing measures. RESULTS We identified 1620 PICU patients with suspected bacterial CAIs. Empirical vancomycin decreased from a baseline of 73% to 45%, a 38% relative reduction. No patient not prescribed empirical vancomycin later required the addition of vancomycin or other MRSA-targeted antibiotics. There was no change in nephrotoxicity or in the balancing measures. CONCLUSIONS Development of clear and concise recommendations, combined with clinician education and decision support via an order set, was an effective and safe strategy to reduce PICU vancomycin use. Retrospective validation of the recommendations with local data were key to obtaining PICU clinician buy in.

Details

ISSN :
10984275 and 00314005
Volume :
148
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cb6858f649e3d615840b3019ff21a067
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2020-009142