The 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitals

Abstract Background Patient-level surveillance (indication, appropriate choice, dosing, route, duration) of antimicrobial use in Canadian hospitals is needed to reduce antimicrobial overuse and misuse. Patient-level surveillance has not been performed on a national level in Canada. The Global Point...

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Main Authors: Charles Frenette, David Sperlea, Greg J. German, Kevin Afra, Jennifer Boswell, Sandra Chang, Herman Goossens, Jennifer Grant, Marie-Astrid Lefebvre, Allison McGeer, Dominic Mertz, Michelle Science, Ann Versporten, Daniel J. G. Thirion
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13756-020-00758-x
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spelling doaj-b30dc6580ad1441abd00d6aed1a8ddbc2020-11-25T02:41:22ZengBMCAntimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control2047-29942020-07-01911910.1186/s13756-020-00758-xThe 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitalsCharles Frenette0David Sperlea1Greg J. German2Kevin Afra3Jennifer Boswell4Sandra Chang5Herman Goossens6Jennifer Grant7Marie-Astrid Lefebvre8Allison McGeer9Dominic Mertz10Michelle Science11Ann Versporten12Daniel J. G. Thirion13McGill University Health CenterFaculty of Pharmacy, Université de MontréalHealth PEIFraser HealthHealth PEIRichmond HospitalLaboratory of Medical Microbiology, Vaccine & Infectious Disease Institute, University of AntwerpVancouver General HospitalMontreal Children HospitalMount Sinai HospitalHamilton Health SciencesThe Hospital for Sick ChildrenLaboratory of Medical Microbiology, Vaccine & Infectious Disease Institute, University of AntwerpMcGill University Health CenterAbstract Background Patient-level surveillance (indication, appropriate choice, dosing, route, duration) of antimicrobial use in Canadian hospitals is needed to reduce antimicrobial overuse and misuse. Patient-level surveillance has not been performed on a national level in Canada. The Global Point Prevalence Survey of Antimicrobial Consumption and Resistance (Global-PPS) is an international collaborative to monitor antimicrobial use and resistance in hospitals worldwide. Global-PPS locally documents on a single day patient-level antimicrobial prescribing practices. This article presents the results of the 2017 Global-PPS in Canadian hospitals with established antimicrobial stewardship programs. Methods Hospitals part of the Canadian Nosocomial Infection Surveillance Program were invited to participate. Surveys could be performed any time in the 2017 calendar year. All in-patient wards in each hospital were surveyed by a physician, pharmacist or nurse with infectious disease training. Results Fourteen Canadian hospitals participated in the survey. Of 4118 patients, 1400 patients (34.0%) received a total of 2041 antimicrobials. Overall, 73.1% (n = 1493) of antimicrobials were for therapeutic use, 14.2% (n = 288) were for medical prophylaxis, 8.3% (n = 170) were for surgical prophylaxis, 1.8% (n = 37) were for other reasons, and 0.2% (n = 3) were used as prokinetic agents. Only 2.5% (n = 50) were for unknown reasons. For antimicrobials for therapeutic use, 29.9% of patients were treated for lower respiratory tract (343/1147), 10.5% for intra-abdominal (120/1147), 9.3% for skin and soft tissue (107/1147) and 7.5% for gastro-intestinal (86/1147) infections. Conclusions Standardized methodology amongst Global-PPSs allows the comparison of our results to the 2015 Global-PPS. The prevalence of antimicrobial use on medical, surgical, and intensive care wards are similar to those previously observed in North America. Indication of antimicrobials has not been previously reported on such a large scale in Canadian hospitals. This report serves as a comparison for further point prevalence surveys that are currently underway. It will be used for identifying opportunities and benchmarking in antibiotic stewardship.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13756-020-00758-xBenchmarkingAntibiotic useAntimicrobial indicationAntibiotic stewardshipAntibiotic resistance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charles Frenette
David Sperlea
Greg J. German
Kevin Afra
Jennifer Boswell
Sandra Chang
Herman Goossens
Jennifer Grant
Marie-Astrid Lefebvre
Allison McGeer
Dominic Mertz
Michelle Science
Ann Versporten
Daniel J. G. Thirion
spellingShingle Charles Frenette
David Sperlea
Greg J. German
Kevin Afra
Jennifer Boswell
Sandra Chang
Herman Goossens
Jennifer Grant
Marie-Astrid Lefebvre
Allison McGeer
Dominic Mertz
Michelle Science
Ann Versporten
Daniel J. G. Thirion
The 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitals
Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control
Benchmarking
Antibiotic use
Antimicrobial indication
Antibiotic stewardship
Antibiotic resistance
author_facet Charles Frenette
David Sperlea
Greg J. German
Kevin Afra
Jennifer Boswell
Sandra Chang
Herman Goossens
Jennifer Grant
Marie-Astrid Lefebvre
Allison McGeer
Dominic Mertz
Michelle Science
Ann Versporten
Daniel J. G. Thirion
author_sort Charles Frenette
title The 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitals
title_short The 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitals
title_full The 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitals
title_fullStr The 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitals
title_full_unstemmed The 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in Canadian hospitals
title_sort 2017 global point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption and resistance in canadian hospitals
publisher BMC
series Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control
issn 2047-2994
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Patient-level surveillance (indication, appropriate choice, dosing, route, duration) of antimicrobial use in Canadian hospitals is needed to reduce antimicrobial overuse and misuse. Patient-level surveillance has not been performed on a national level in Canada. The Global Point Prevalence Survey of Antimicrobial Consumption and Resistance (Global-PPS) is an international collaborative to monitor antimicrobial use and resistance in hospitals worldwide. Global-PPS locally documents on a single day patient-level antimicrobial prescribing practices. This article presents the results of the 2017 Global-PPS in Canadian hospitals with established antimicrobial stewardship programs. Methods Hospitals part of the Canadian Nosocomial Infection Surveillance Program were invited to participate. Surveys could be performed any time in the 2017 calendar year. All in-patient wards in each hospital were surveyed by a physician, pharmacist or nurse with infectious disease training. Results Fourteen Canadian hospitals participated in the survey. Of 4118 patients, 1400 patients (34.0%) received a total of 2041 antimicrobials. Overall, 73.1% (n = 1493) of antimicrobials were for therapeutic use, 14.2% (n = 288) were for medical prophylaxis, 8.3% (n = 170) were for surgical prophylaxis, 1.8% (n = 37) were for other reasons, and 0.2% (n = 3) were used as prokinetic agents. Only 2.5% (n = 50) were for unknown reasons. For antimicrobials for therapeutic use, 29.9% of patients were treated for lower respiratory tract (343/1147), 10.5% for intra-abdominal (120/1147), 9.3% for skin and soft tissue (107/1147) and 7.5% for gastro-intestinal (86/1147) infections. Conclusions Standardized methodology amongst Global-PPSs allows the comparison of our results to the 2015 Global-PPS. The prevalence of antimicrobial use on medical, surgical, and intensive care wards are similar to those previously observed in North America. Indication of antimicrobials has not been previously reported on such a large scale in Canadian hospitals. This report serves as a comparison for further point prevalence surveys that are currently underway. It will be used for identifying opportunities and benchmarking in antibiotic stewardship.
topic Benchmarking
Antibiotic use
Antimicrobial indication
Antibiotic stewardship
Antibiotic resistance
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13756-020-00758-x
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