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Reduction in antibiotic use through procalcitonin testing in patients in the medical admission unit or intensive care unit with suspicion of infection

Reduction in antibiotic use through procalcitonin testing in patients in the medical admission unit or intensive care unit with suspicion of infection
Reduction in antibiotic use through procalcitonin testing in patients in the medical admission unit or intensive care unit with suspicion of infection
We report an evaluation of the utility of serum procalcitonin (PCT) measurement as an additional diagnostic tool to support initiating or withholding antibiotics in clinical situations where there is a clinical suspicion of infection but the diagnosis is uncertain. During a six-month period, 99 patients on the medical admission unit (MAU) with suspected infection, and 42 patients on the intensive care unit (ICU) with clinical signs or physiological parameters suggesting possible new infection, had serum PCT concentration measured with the result available within 90. min of the request. The test was initiated by the microbiology/infection team during clinical consultations to support the antibiotic decision. On the basis of low PCT values, antibiotics were withheld in MAU on 52 occasions and in ICU on 42 occasions. Patients were followed up prospectively for a week. There was neither progression of bacterial infection requiring antibiotics, nor complications or infection-related mortality in any patients who were denied antibiotics on either MAU or ICU. Without the PCT value it is likely that all of these patients would have received empirical antibiotics. Reduction in unnecessary antibiotic usage was made without any adverse effects on these patients and there was a clear reduction in antibiotic prescribing with cost reduction implications. PCT has the potential to become a valuable tool in antibiotic management.
Antibiotic stewardship, Biomarker, Collateral damage, Procalcitonin, Sepsis
0195-6701
289-292
Saeed, K.
87cb67e5-71e8-4759-bf23-2ea00ebd8b39
Dryden, M.
a6c300f9-5c26-4884-980b-c098b0688ab1
Bourne, S.
b5efbc3f-70be-426f-9d45-9015bb90c8b3
Paget, C.
f0a5263a-4256-4489-8f22-d3560ae49972
Proud, A.
cac45c36-4df1-4ddf-acc1-8fd0383e5e2f
Saeed, K.
87cb67e5-71e8-4759-bf23-2ea00ebd8b39
Dryden, M.
a6c300f9-5c26-4884-980b-c098b0688ab1
Bourne, S.
b5efbc3f-70be-426f-9d45-9015bb90c8b3
Paget, C.
f0a5263a-4256-4489-8f22-d3560ae49972
Proud, A.
cac45c36-4df1-4ddf-acc1-8fd0383e5e2f

Saeed, K., Dryden, M., Bourne, S., Paget, C. and Proud, A. (2011) Reduction in antibiotic use through procalcitonin testing in patients in the medical admission unit or intensive care unit with suspicion of infection. Journal of Hospital Infection, 78 (4), 289-292. (doi:10.1016/j.jhin.2011.03.018).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We report an evaluation of the utility of serum procalcitonin (PCT) measurement as an additional diagnostic tool to support initiating or withholding antibiotics in clinical situations where there is a clinical suspicion of infection but the diagnosis is uncertain. During a six-month period, 99 patients on the medical admission unit (MAU) with suspected infection, and 42 patients on the intensive care unit (ICU) with clinical signs or physiological parameters suggesting possible new infection, had serum PCT concentration measured with the result available within 90. min of the request. The test was initiated by the microbiology/infection team during clinical consultations to support the antibiotic decision. On the basis of low PCT values, antibiotics were withheld in MAU on 52 occasions and in ICU on 42 occasions. Patients were followed up prospectively for a week. There was neither progression of bacterial infection requiring antibiotics, nor complications or infection-related mortality in any patients who were denied antibiotics on either MAU or ICU. Without the PCT value it is likely that all of these patients would have received empirical antibiotics. Reduction in unnecessary antibiotic usage was made without any adverse effects on these patients and there was a clear reduction in antibiotic prescribing with cost reduction implications. PCT has the potential to become a valuable tool in antibiotic management.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 29 March 2011
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 June 2011
Published date: August 2011
Additional Information: Copyright: Copyright 2011 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords: Antibiotic stewardship, Biomarker, Collateral damage, Procalcitonin, Sepsis

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 447296
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/447296
ISSN: 0195-6701
PURE UUID: b0263711-2e74-4bc1-8732-c2c97c59b311
ORCID for K. Saeed: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0123-0302

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Date deposited: 08 Mar 2021 17:35
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:56

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Contributors

Author: K. Saeed ORCID iD
Author: M. Dryden
Author: S. Bourne
Author: C. Paget
Author: A. Proud

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