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- Registro de ensaios clínicos dos EUA
- Ensaio Clínico NCT03245879
Antibiotic Stewardship in Small Hospitals (SCORE)
7 de agosto de 2017 atualizado por: Eddie Stenehjem, Intermountain Health Care, Inc.
Impact of Implementing Antibiotic Stewardship Programs in 15 Small Hospitals: A Cluster-Randomized Trial Intervention
Core elements of effective antibiotic stewardship programs (ASPs) have been identified and evidence-based guidelines have been developed for implementation.
The majority of the evidence used for these guidelines are from published studies on the effectiveness of ASPs in large academic or large community hospitals.
A significant portion of healthcare in the United States, however, takes place in small hospitals.
In 2015, 73% of US hospitals had < 200 beds (4,057 hospitals) and accounted for 29% of all US inpatient bed days.
Limited studies on the effectiveness of antibiotic stewardship implementation have been performed in hospitals with < 200 beds.
Antibiotic use rates and selection patterns in these small hospitals are similar to that of large hospitals and the majority of small hospitals lack formal ASP that meet the CDC's core elements.
The objective of this real-world implementation study was to assess the effectiveness of three ASP strategies of escalating intensity designed specifically for small hospitals within a vertically integrated healthcare delivery system.
Visão geral do estudo
Status
Concluído
Intervenção / Tratamento
Descrição detalhada
The investigators designed a clustered randomized controlled intervention to evaluate 3 antibiotic stewardship strategies designed for small hospitals.
Each hospital was randomized to one of three ASP interventions with increasing levels of intensity and intervention (Programs 1, 2, 3).
The investigators felt that clinical equipoise about the effect of ASPs did not exist and randomizing to a no-intervention group was unacceptable.
Antibiotic use was compared within each group before and after the intervention.
In keeping with other real-world implementation studies, secondary analyses were planned to include an interrupted time series design to evaluate the impact of each strategy.
Randomization of hospitals was stratified based on patient volume.
Hospital administration and clinical leadership were not blinded to which ASP program they were randomly assigned to, but there were no public announcements.
The intervention started March 2014 and ended June 2015.
Tipo de estudo
Intervencional
Inscrição (Real)
30000
Estágio
- Não aplicável
Critérios de participação
Os pesquisadores procuram pessoas que se encaixem em uma determinada descrição, chamada de critérios de elegibilidade. Alguns exemplos desses critérios são a condição geral de saúde de uma pessoa ou tratamentos anteriores.
Critérios de elegibilidade
Idades elegíveis para estudo
- Filho
- Adulto
- Adulto mais velho
Aceita Voluntários Saudáveis
Não
Gêneros Elegíveis para o Estudo
Tudo
Descrição
Inclusion Criteria:
- Intermountain Healthcare acute care hospital with < 200 licensed beds
- No formal antibiotic stewardship program in place
Exclusion Criteria:
-All Intermountain Healthcare specialty hospitals, regardless of bed size
Plano de estudo
Esta seção fornece detalhes do plano de estudo, incluindo como o estudo é projetado e o que o estudo está medindo.
Como o estudo é projetado?
Detalhes do projeto
- Finalidade Principal: Pesquisa de serviços de saúde
- Alocação: Randomizado
- Modelo Intervencional: Atribuição Paralela
- Mascaramento: Nenhum (rótulo aberto)
Armas e Intervenções
Grupo de Participantes / Braço |
Intervenção / Tratamento |
|---|---|
|
Comparador Ativo: Program 1
Implementation of a basic antibiotic stewardship program focusing on education, access to Infectious Diseases physicians, and availability of antibiotic use data.
|
Program 1 hospitals received a basic curriculum and tools for implementation of basic antibiotic stewardship interventions.
Hospitals required an indication for every antibiotic order.
A daily email was sent to a designated email account when a patient had been on an antibiotic for >48 hours.
Curriculum included implementing antibiotic time-outs, IV to PO conversion, indications, evaluating for bug-drug mismatches, and recommendations on when to call the Infectious Diseases (ID) hotline.
A daily antibiotic stewardship check list was created.
All materials were provided to all pharmacists and remained on-site.
Clinicians had access to an ID telephone hotline to answer clinical questions.
Pharmacy directors and hospital leadership were provided a monthly, hospital-specific, antibiotic use dashboard.
All pharmacy directors and staff received a monthly newsletter.
|
|
Comparador Ativo: Program 2
This arm increases antibiotic stewardship education and interventions.
Program 2 hospitals performed audit and feedback of pre-specified antibiotics and implemented locally controlled restrictions.
|
Program 2 hospitals received all the interventions of Program 1.
In addition, Program 2 hospitals received more intense antibiotic stewardship education.
Educational topics included audit and feedback, antibiotic de-escalation, the need for antibiotics targeting anaerobic bacteria, antibiotic allergy verification, and antibiotic restrictions.
Pharmacists in Program 2 hospitals reviewed patients on vancomycin, piperacillin/tazobactam, imipenem, meropenem, and cefepime.
For patients receiving one of these antibiotics, pharmacists reviewed the patients' microbiology data to identify opportunities for antibiotic de-escalation, IV to PO conversion, bug-drug mismatches, and/or indications for calling the ID hotline.
Program 2 hospitals also restricted daptomycin, linezolid, imipenem, meropenem, ceftaroline, tigecycline, and all mold active antifungals.
In Program 2 hospitals, the local pharmacy staff pre-authorized restricted antibiotics based on defined criteria.
|
|
Comparador Ativo: Program 3
This arm was the most intensive antibiotic stewardship intervention.
It included signficant audit and feedback, ID controlled restrictions, and ID review of designated culture/lab results.
|
Program 3 hospitals received all the interventions of Program 1 and Program 2. In addition, pharmacists in program 3 hospitals reviewed an expanded list of antibiotics for audit and feedback.
These antibiotics included: Vancomycin, piperacillin/tazobactam, imipenem, meropenem, cefepime, ertapenem, aminoglycosides, ceftriaxone, and fluoroquinolones.
Program 3 hospitals implemented the same antibiotic restrictions as Program 2 but ID pharmacists controlled pre-authorization of restricted antibiotics.
In addition, an ID physician reviewed pre-specified positive cultures (e.g.
all positive blood cultures, cultures with highly resistant Enterobacteraciae) and contacted providers with recommendations as needed.
ID physician review occurred Monday through Friday and alerts were batched daily at 6am.
|
O que o estudo está medindo?
Medidas de resultados primários
Medida de resultado |
Descrição da medida |
Prazo |
|---|---|---|
|
Total antibiotic use
Prazo: Total antibiotic use during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the antibiotic use during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Evaluated change in total antibiotic use between the baseline and intervention periods while accounting for the cluster randomized design.
|
Total antibiotic use during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the antibiotic use during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Medidas de resultados secundários
Medida de resultado |
Descrição da medida |
Prazo |
|---|---|---|
|
Broad spectrum antibiotic use
Prazo: Broad spectrum antibiotic use during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the broad spectrum antibiotic use during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Evaluated change in broad spectrum antibiotic use between the baseline and intervention periods
|
Broad spectrum antibiotic use during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the broad spectrum antibiotic use during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
|
Restricted antibiotic use
Prazo: Restricted antibiotic use during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the restricted antibiotic use during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Evaluated change in restricted antibiotic use between the baseline and intervention periods
|
Restricted antibiotic use during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the restricted antibiotic use during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
|
30-day readmission
Prazo: 30-day readmission rate during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the 30-day readmission rate during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Evaluated change in 30 day readmission rates between the baseline and intervention periods
|
30-day readmission rate during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the 30-day readmission rate during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
|
30-day mortality
Prazo: 30-day mortality rate during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the 30-day mortality rate during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Evaluated change in 30 day mortality rates between the baseline and intervention periods
|
30-day mortality rate during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the 30-day mortality rate during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
|
Hospital length of stay
Prazo: Average hospital length of stay during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the average hospital length of stay during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Evaluated change in hospital length of stay between the baseline and intervention periods
|
Average hospital length of stay during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the average hospital length of stay during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
|
Clostridium difficile
Prazo: C. difficile rate during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the C. difficile rate during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Evaluated change in Clostridium difficile incidence between the baseline and intervention periods
|
C. difficile rate during the 15 months of Intervention (April 1, 2014 through June 30th 2015) was compared to the C. difficile rate during the 12 month baseline period (Jan 1 through Dec 31 2013).
|
Colaboradores e Investigadores
É aqui que você encontrará pessoas e organizações envolvidas com este estudo.
Patrocinador
Publicações e links úteis
A pessoa responsável por inserir informações sobre o estudo fornece voluntariamente essas publicações. Estes podem ser sobre qualquer coisa relacionada ao estudo.
Publicações Gerais
- Stenehjem E, Hersh AL, Sheng X, Jones P, Buckel WR, Lloyd JF, Howe S, Evans RS, Greene T, Pavia AT. Antibiotic Use in Small Community Hospitals. Clin Infect Dis. 2016 Nov 15;63(10):1273-1280. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciw588. Epub 2016 Sep 30.
- Stenehjem E, Hersh AL, Buckel WR, Jones P, Sheng X, Evans RS, Burke JP, Lopansri BK, Srivastava R, Greene T, Pavia AT. Impact of Implementing Antibiotic Stewardship Programs in 15 Small Hospitals: A Cluster-Randomized Intervention. Clin Infect Dis. 2018 Aug 1;67(4):525-532. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciy155.
Links úteis
Datas de registro do estudo
Essas datas acompanham o progresso do registro do estudo e os envios de resumo dos resultados para ClinicalTrials.gov. Os registros do estudo e os resultados relatados são revisados pela National Library of Medicine (NLM) para garantir que atendam aos padrões específicos de controle de qualidade antes de serem publicados no site público.
Datas Principais do Estudo
Início do estudo (Real)
1 de julho de 2013
Conclusão Primária (Real)
1 de junho de 2015
Conclusão do estudo (Real)
1 de junho de 2015
Datas de inscrição no estudo
Enviado pela primeira vez
3 de agosto de 2017
Enviado pela primeira vez que atendeu aos critérios de CQ
7 de agosto de 2017
Primeira postagem (Real)
10 de agosto de 2017
Atualizações de registro de estudo
Última Atualização Postada (Real)
10 de agosto de 2017
Última atualização enviada que atendeu aos critérios de controle de qualidade
7 de agosto de 2017
Última verificação
1 de agosto de 2017
Mais Informações
Termos relacionados a este estudo
Outros números de identificação do estudo
- 1024823
Plano para dados de participantes individuais (IPD)
Planeja compartilhar dados de participantes individuais (IPD)?
Não
Descrição do plano IPD
N/A.
No individual patient level data available.
Informações sobre medicamentos e dispositivos, documentos de estudo
Estuda um medicamento regulamentado pela FDA dos EUA
Não
Estuda um produto de dispositivo regulamentado pela FDA dos EUA
Não
produto fabricado e exportado dos EUA
Não
Essas informações foram obtidas diretamente do site clinicaltrials.gov sem nenhuma alteração. Se você tiver alguma solicitação para alterar, remover ou atualizar os detalhes do seu estudo, entre em contato com register@clinicaltrials.gov. Assim que uma alteração for implementada em clinicaltrials.gov, ela também será atualizada automaticamente em nosso site .
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