The Effect of Audit-and-feedback on the Excessive Use of Post-procedural Antimicrobials in Urologic Patients: a Pilot Intervention Study
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Urologic Diseases
- Sponsor
- Iowa City Veterans Affairs Medical Center
- Enrollment
- 3
- Locations
- 3
- Primary Endpoint
- Percentage of Cases Who Received Excessive Post-procedural Antimicrobials
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 2 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Antimicrobial resistance is one of today''s most urgent public health problems. An important strategy to slow the spread of antimicrobial resistance is the promotion of judicious antimicrobial use. There are many opportunities to reduce unnecessary antimicrobial-prescribing, including in patients undergoing surgical procedures. The following study will specifically study opportunities to improve antimicrobial use in patients undergoing common urologic procedures at hospitals in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA).
Guidelines recommend giving antibiotics for no more than 24-hours after most urologic procedures, but the investigators have shown that the unnecessary use of post-procedural antimicrobials is common in this setting. In a national cohort of nearly 30,000 VHA patients, excessive post-procedural antimicrobials were prescribed after 37.2% of urologic procedures for a median duration of 3.0 excess days.
In this study, the investigators will evaluate whether giving regular feedback to providers at 3 VHA hospitals can reduce unnecessary antimicrobial use after urologic procedures.
Detailed Description
Trial design: The investigators propose a before/after quasi-experimental design, which will be analyzed with an interrupted time-series analysis. Participants: There will be 3 intervention VHA hospitals. To be eligible, a VHA hospital must perform the following 3 urologic procedures: transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP), transurethral resection of a bladder tumor (TUBRT), and ureteroscopy (URS). Interventions: The study team will conduct an audit-and-feedback intervention focused on the unnecessary use of prolonged antimicrobial therapy after common urologic procedures. The audit-and-feedback intervention will target the urology providers at the 3 intervention sites. Outcomes: The primary outcome for this study will be the frequency of excessive post-procedural antimicrobial-prescribing in the 3 urologic procedures of interest. Secondary outcomes include several safety outcomes, such as late antimicrobial prescriptions, return visits, mortality, C. difficile testing and C. difficile infection. For each site, the pretest period will be the 2-years prior to the intervention. The intervention itself will last 1-year. Selection of sites: Intervention sites will be randomly selected from the top quartile of all sites, as ranked on the frequency of excessive post-procedural antimicrobial-prescribing. If sites refuse to participate, additional sites will be invited until 3 sites agree to be enrolled. Statistical methods: At the conclusion of the pilot trial, a quasi-experimental interrupted time-series (ITS) analysis will be performed to assess the change in monthly antimicrobial use for the 3 intervention sites combined. The time frame for this ITS analysis will be the two-years prior to the pilot trial's initiation through the trial's 1-year intervention period for a total of 36 months.
Investigators
Daniel Livorsi
Principal investigator
Iowa City Veterans Affairs Medical Center
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •A practicing urologist at an intervention site, OR
- •A member of the antimicrobial stewardship team at an intervention site
Exclusion Criteria
- Not provided
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Percentage of Cases Who Received Excessive Post-procedural Antimicrobials
Time Frame: Within 1 day of the urologic procedure
Excessive post-procedural antimicrobial use is defined as a prescription for a antimicrobial agent on post-procedural day one. For this specific outcome measure, the numerator will be the number of patients who received an excessive post-procedural antimicrobial, and the denominator will be all patients at the site who underwent a qualifying urologic procedure.
Secondary Outcomes
- Excessive Post-procedural Antimicrobial Duration (Mean)(Within 30-days of the urologic procedure)
- Percentage of Cases Who Received a Late Antimicrobial Prescription(Within 30-days of the urologic procedure)
- Percentage of Cases Who Were Re-admitted to the Hospital or Presented to an Emergency Department or an Urgent Care Clinic(Within 30-days of the urologic procedure)
- Percentage of Cases Who Died (Mortality)(Within 30-days of the urologic procedure)
- Percentage of Cases Who Underwent Clostridioides Difficile Testing(Within 30-days of the urologic procedure)
- Percentage of Cases Who Acquired Clostridioides Difficile Infection(Within 30-days of the urologic procedure)