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Neonatal intensive care unit antibiotic use.

CPQCC Publication
TitleNeonatal intensive care unit antibiotic use.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsSchulman J, Dimand RJ, Lee HC, Duenas GV, Bennett MV, Gould JB
JournalPediatrics
Volume135
Issue5
Pagination826-33
Date Published2015 May
ISSN1098-4275
KeywordsAnti-Bacterial Agents, Bacterial Infections, Cohort Studies, Drug Utilization, Enterocolitis, Necrotizing, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Retrospective Studies
Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Treatment of suspected infection is a mainstay of the daily work in the NICU. We hypothesized that NICU antibiotic prescribing practice variation correlates with rates of proven infection, necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), mortality, inborn admission, and with NICU surgical volume and average length of stay.

METHODS: In a retrospective cohort study of 52,061 infants in 127 NICUs across California during 2013, we compared sample means and explored linear and nonparametric correlations, stratified by NICU level of care and lowest/highest antibiotic use rate quartiles.

RESULTS: Overall antibiotic use varied 40-fold, from 2.4% to 97.1% of patient-days; median = 24.5%. At all levels of care, it was independent of proven infection, NEC, surgical volume, or mortality. Fifty percent of intermediate level NICUs were in the highest antibiotic use quartile, yet most of these units reported infection rates of zero. Regional NICUs in the highest antibiotic quartile reported inborn admission rate 218% higher (0.24 vs 0.11, P = .03), and length of stay 35% longer (90.2 days vs 66.9 days, P = .03) than regional NICUs in the lowest quartile.

CONCLUSIONS: Forty-fold variation in NICU antibiotic prescribing practice across 127 NICUs with similar burdens of proven infection, NEC, surgical volume, and mortality indicates that a considerable portion of antibiotic use lacks clear warrant; in some NICUs, antibiotics are overused. Additional study is needed to establish appropriate use ranges and elucidate the determinants and directionality of relationships between antibiotic and other resource use.

DOI10.1542/peds.2014-3409
Alternate JournalPediatrics
PubMed ID25896845