antibiotic stewardship Flashcards

1
Q

Urgent threats

A

C. diff

carbapenem resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE)

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2
Q

Serious threats

A

MCR acinetobacter
MDR pseudomonas aeruginosa
ESBLs in enterobacteriaceae

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3
Q

reason to be concerned?

A

antibiotics are the only drug where use in one patient can impact the effectiveness in another
antimicrobial stewardship has been identified as the key component to improving antibiotic use

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4
Q

core elements of hospital ASPs

A

leadership support
accountability
drug expertise
acttions to support optimal antibiotic use: policies, broad interventions, pharmacy driven interventions, diagnosis and infection specific interventions
tracking: monitoring of antibiotic prescribing, use and resistance
reporting information
education

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5
Q

goals of AS

A

combat emergence of resistance
control costs
improve clinical outcomes

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6
Q

core members of the ASP

A

directed or co-directed by: ID physician, clinical pharmacist with ID training
other: microbiologist, IT specialist, infection control and hospital epidemiologist, members of the medical staff interested/engaged in antimicrobial stewardship

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7
Q

antibiotic selection - the “five rights”

A
right patient
right drug
right dose (strength and interval)
right route
right time (duration)
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8
Q

colonization

A

bacteria or fungi are present at the site sampled, but are not causing infection - no ABs required!

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9
Q

contamination:

A

bacteria or fungi are present in the lab sample but not at the site being culture - no ABs required!

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10
Q

right drug

A
disease state (type of infection)
probably pathogens/organisms (risk stratification)
drug activity against pathogens
penetration at site of infection
effective conc
AEs
down stream resistance/collateral damage
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11
Q

antibiogram

A

a summary of the cumulative susceptibilities of bacteria against specified antimicrobials in a defined period of time

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12
Q

Cmax:MIC

A

aminoglycosides
fluoroquinolones
daptomycin
metronidazole

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13
Q

AUC:MIC

A

vancomycin

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14
Q

T>MIC

A

B-lactams

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15
Q

criteria for IV to PO

A
diagnosis compatible with oral therapy
adequate GI absorption
improvement in local s/sxs of infection
afebrile (under 100 F) for at least 8 hours
improving leukocytosis
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16
Q

de-escalation

A

preferred order of treatment recommendations:
penicillins to cephalosporins to carbapenems
preferred order for de-escalating:
carbapenems to cephalosporins to penicillins

17
Q

mechanisms of drug resistance

A

altered target binding site (HIGH level resistance - MSSA to MRSA)
up-regulation of efflux pumps (LOW level resistance - increased MICs, can overcome)
Increased production of enzymes
Altered out membrane protein “porin channel”

most bacteria have 1 or 2 - P. aeruginosa and Acinetobacter use ALL FOUR