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Bug Squad 101 and O ther A ntibiotic Pearls

Bug Squad 101 and O ther A ntibiotic Pearls. Chelsea Mannebach September 21 st , 2011. Objectives. Explain the purpose and goals of Bug Squad Discuss the importance of appropriate antimicrobial utilization Describe clinical pearls relating to antibiotic administration. Audience Poll.

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Bug Squad 101 and O ther A ntibiotic Pearls

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  1. Bug Squad 101 and Other Antibiotic Pearls Chelsea Mannebach September 21st, 2011

  2. Objectives • Explain the purpose and goals of Bug Squad • Discuss the importance of appropriate antimicrobial utilization • Describe clinical pearls relating to antibiotic administration

  3. Audience Poll • What do you know about Bug Squad? • (Have you ever heard about Bug Squad?)

  4. Bug Squad • Multidisciplinary team • Microbiology • Infection prevention • Medicine • Pharmacy • Twice weekly meetings • Goal • Antimicrobial stewardship/appropriate antimicrobial utilization

  5. Audience Poll • Why target antimicrobials?

  6. Issues • 10-30% of the average hospital pharmacy budget is spent on antimicrobials • Up to 50% of antibiotic use in hospitals is estimated to be inappropriate • Increasing rate of bacterial resistance thought to be in part due to antibiotic use • Improvements in antimicrobial use has been shown to improve patient outcomes and reduce resistance rates • Decreased number of antimicrobial drugs in pipeline From “Antimicrobial Stewardship,” Jamie Winner. Management of Infectious Diseases 32nd Annual Madison Clinical Conference. March 30, 2011.

  7. Audience Poll • What is antimicrobial stewardship?

  8. Antimicrobial Stewardship Goals • Optimize patient outcomes through improved antimicrobial utilization • Efficacy • Toxicity • Resistance • Reduce health care costs without adversely impacting quality of care • Length of stay • Drug cost From “Antimicrobial Stewardship,” Jamie Winner. Management of Infectious Diseases 32nd Annual Madison Clinical Conference. March 30, 2011.

  9. Microbiology • Culture information • Latest reports help guide de-escalation and appropriate antibiotic selection • Insight • Resistance Data • Antibiogram • Problem Bugs • MRSA (Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus) • ESBLs (Extended Spectrum Beta Lactamases) • VRE (Vancomycin Resistant Enterococci) • KPCs (KlebsiellaPneumoniaeCarbapenemases) • C. difficile

  10. Audience Poll • Why de-escalate?

  11. De-escalation • Reduces selection pressure responsible for antimicrobial resistance by decreasing antimicrobial exposure • Contains costs • Reduces the risk of adverse events From “Antimicrobial Stewardship,” Jamie Winner. Management of Infectious Diseases 32nd Annual Madison Clinical Conference. March 30, 2011.

  12. Antibiogram • Susceptibility rates • Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) breakpoints • Dosing information • Cost data

  13. Infection Prevention • Isolation requirements • MRSA • c. difficile • ESBLs • Viruses (roto, RSV, influenza) • Meningitis (neisseria) • Sepsis Campaign • Protocols • Criteria • Mortality rate • Public Health • VAP • Ventilator-associated pneumonia • CAUTI • Catheter-associated UTI • CLABSI • Central line-associated blood stream infection

  14. Medicine • Dr. Gray • pathology • Dr. Skeem • internists • Dr. Workman • surgery

  15. Pharmacy • Selection and streamlining • Dose optimization • Patient characteristics • renal function, age, weight • Site of infection • meningitis, neutropenic fever, pneumonia • Pharmacokinetics • monitoring levels • IV to PO Conversion From “Antimicrobial Stewardship,” Jamie Winner. Management of Infectious Diseases 32nd Annual Madison Clinical Conference. March 30, 2011.

  16. Outcome Measurements • Microbiologic • Susceptibilities and resistance • Number of infections due to specific organisms • Clinical • Adverse drug events • Mortality • Clinical cure • Length of stay • Readmission rates • Financial • Cost savings From “Antimicrobial Stewardship,” Jamie Winner. Management of Infectious Diseases 32nd Annual Madison Clinical Conference. March 30, 2011.

  17. Antibiotic Clinical Pearls • Sepsis • Source control • Timeliness • Pharmacokinetics • Therapeutic window • Monitoring levels • Time dependent vs. concentration dependent

  18. Sepsis • 50-70% mortality • Mortality increases 7-10% every hour if not treated with goal-directed care • Sepsis Campaign (started 2002) • Reduce mortality to 25% • Goal-directed therapy • Reperfusion • Labs and cultures • Source control • Antibiotics Surviving sepsis campaign: international guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2008. 2004 (revised 2008 Jan). NGC:006316. Society of Critical Care Medicine

  19. Pharmacokinetics • Time-dependent Antibiotics • Vancomycin • B-lactams • Concentration-dependent Antibiotics • Fluoroquinolones • Aminoglycosides

  20. Summary • Dry pipeline, we are stuck with what we have • Bugs are smart • Essential that we protect our patients and our antimicrobials • Nursing plays an important role in ensuring appropriate and timely antimicrobial administration

  21. Questions?

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