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The impact of point-of-care testing for influenza on antimicrobial stewardship (PIAMS) in UK primary care: protocol for a mixed methods study

The impact of point-of-care testing for influenza on antimicrobial stewardship (PIAMS) in UK primary care: protocol for a mixed methods study
The impact of point-of-care testing for influenza on antimicrobial stewardship (PIAMS) in UK primary care: protocol for a mixed methods study
Background: molecular point-of-care testing (POCT) used in primary care can inform whether a patient presenting with an acute respiratory infection has influenza. A confirmed clinical diagnosis, particularly early in the disease, could inform better antimicrobial stewardship. Social distancing and lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic have disturbed previous patterns of influenza infections in 2021. However, data from samples taken in the last quarter of 2022 suggest that influenza represents 36% of sentinel network positive virology, compared with 24% for respiratory syncytial virus. Problems with integration into the clinical workflow is a known barrier to incorporating technology into routine care.

Objective: this study aims to report the impact of POCT for influenza on antimicrobial prescribing in primary care. We will additionally describe severe outcomes of infection (hospitalization and mortality) and how POCT is integrated into primary care workflows.

Methods: the impact of POCT for influenza on antimicrobial stewardship (PIAMS) in UK primary care is an observational study being conducted between December 2022 and May 2023 and involving 10 practices that contribute data to the English sentinel network. Up to 1000 people who present to participating practices with respiratory symptoms will be swabbed and tested with a rapid molecular POCT analyzer in the practice. Antimicrobial prescribing and other study outcomes will be collected by linking information from the POCT analyzer with data from the patient’s computerized medical record. We will collect data on how POCT is incorporated into practice using data flow diagrams, unified modeling language use case diagrams, and Business Process Modeling Notation.

Results: we will present the crude and adjusted odds of antimicrobial prescribing (all antibiotics and antivirals) given a POCT diagnosis of influenza, stratifying by whether individuals have a respiratory or other relevant diagnosis (eg, bronchiectasis). We will also present the rates of hospital referrals and deaths related to influenza infection in PIAMS study practices compared with a set of matched practices in the sentinel network and the rest of the network. We will describe any difference in implementation models in terms of staff involved and workflow.

Conclusions: this study will generate data on the impact of POCT testing for influenza in primary care as well as help to inform about the feasibility of incorporating POCT into primary care workflows. It will inform the design of future larger studies about the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of POCT to improve antimicrobial stewardship and any impact on severe outcomes.
RSV, acute respiratory infection, antimicrobial, antimicrobial stewardship, general practice, health care, implementation, influenza, influenza point-of-care systems, medical records systems, computerized, outcome assessment, primary care, respiratory symptom
1929-0748
e46938
Hoang, Uy
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de Lusignan, Simon
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Williams, Alice
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Smylie, Jessica
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Aspden, Carole
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Button, Elizabeth
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Macartney, Jack
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Okusi, Cecilia
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Byford, Rachel
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Ferreira, Filipa
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Leston, Meredith
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Xuan Xie, Charis
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Joy, Mark
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Marsden, Gemma
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Clark, Tristan
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de Lusignan, Simon
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Hoang, Uy
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de Lusignan, Simon
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Williams, Alice
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Smylie, Jessica
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Aspden, Carole
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Button, Elizabeth
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Macartney, Jack
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Okusi, Cecilia
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Byford, Rachel
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Ferreira, Filipa
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Leston, Meredith
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Xuan Xie, Charis
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Joy, Mark
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Marsden, Gemma
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Clark, Tristan
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de Lusignan, Simon
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Hoang, Uy, de Lusignan, Simon, Williams, Alice, Smylie, Jessica, Aspden, Carole, Button, Elizabeth, Macartney, Jack, Okusi, Cecilia, Byford, Rachel, Ferreira, Filipa, Leston, Meredith, Xuan Xie, Charis, Joy, Mark, Marsden, Gemma, Clark, Tristan and de Lusignan, Simon (2023) The impact of point-of-care testing for influenza on antimicrobial stewardship (PIAMS) in UK primary care: protocol for a mixed methods study. JMIR Research Protocols, 12, e46938, [e46938]. (doi:10.2196/46938).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: molecular point-of-care testing (POCT) used in primary care can inform whether a patient presenting with an acute respiratory infection has influenza. A confirmed clinical diagnosis, particularly early in the disease, could inform better antimicrobial stewardship. Social distancing and lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic have disturbed previous patterns of influenza infections in 2021. However, data from samples taken in the last quarter of 2022 suggest that influenza represents 36% of sentinel network positive virology, compared with 24% for respiratory syncytial virus. Problems with integration into the clinical workflow is a known barrier to incorporating technology into routine care.

Objective: this study aims to report the impact of POCT for influenza on antimicrobial prescribing in primary care. We will additionally describe severe outcomes of infection (hospitalization and mortality) and how POCT is integrated into primary care workflows.

Methods: the impact of POCT for influenza on antimicrobial stewardship (PIAMS) in UK primary care is an observational study being conducted between December 2022 and May 2023 and involving 10 practices that contribute data to the English sentinel network. Up to 1000 people who present to participating practices with respiratory symptoms will be swabbed and tested with a rapid molecular POCT analyzer in the practice. Antimicrobial prescribing and other study outcomes will be collected by linking information from the POCT analyzer with data from the patient’s computerized medical record. We will collect data on how POCT is incorporated into practice using data flow diagrams, unified modeling language use case diagrams, and Business Process Modeling Notation.

Results: we will present the crude and adjusted odds of antimicrobial prescribing (all antibiotics and antivirals) given a POCT diagnosis of influenza, stratifying by whether individuals have a respiratory or other relevant diagnosis (eg, bronchiectasis). We will also present the rates of hospital referrals and deaths related to influenza infection in PIAMS study practices compared with a set of matched practices in the sentinel network and the rest of the network. We will describe any difference in implementation models in terms of staff involved and workflow.

Conclusions: this study will generate data on the impact of POCT testing for influenza in primary care as well as help to inform about the feasibility of incorporating POCT into primary care workflows. It will inform the design of future larger studies about the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of POCT to improve antimicrobial stewardship and any impact on severe outcomes.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 June 2023
Published date: 16 June 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: We acknowledge Professor Maria Zambon from the UK Health Security Agency for her advice about the use of point-of-care testing in the National Health Service. We also acknowledge the participating practices for sharing data and patients and their parents or carers for volunteering to participate in this study as well as In Practice Systems and Wellbeing for their collaboration with pseudonymized data extraction. We thank Elissa Robbins, Karen Gilliam, Susie Ochoa, and Babar Javed from Roche Diagnostics for the scientific discussions regarding the design of the study protocol and their support in undertaking this study. This collaborative study is funded by Roche Diagnostics through an investigator-initiated grant. The manuscript was also reviewed by Roche Diagnostics before submission. The University of Oxford sponsored this study and reviewed and proposed edits to the study protocol and study documents prior to submission for ethics approval. The Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford is the coordinating center. Publisher Copyright: ©Uy Hoang, Alice Williams, Jessica Smylie, Carole Aspden, Elizabeth Button, Jack Macartney, Cecilia Okusi, Rachel Byford, Filipa Ferreira, Meredith Leston, Charis Xuan Xie, Mark Joy, Gemma Marsden, Tristan Clark, Simon de Lusignan.
Keywords: RSV, acute respiratory infection, antimicrobial, antimicrobial stewardship, general practice, health care, implementation, influenza, influenza point-of-care systems, medical records systems, computerized, outcome assessment, primary care, respiratory symptom

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479027
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479027
ISSN: 1929-0748
PURE UUID: b6e0a966-c0c1-4d48-8ed7-db8e80233df4
ORCID for Tristan Clark: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6026-5295

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Date deposited: 18 Jul 2023 16:53
Last modified: 21 Nov 2024 02:46

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Contributors

Author: Uy Hoang
Author: Simon de Lusignan
Author: Alice Williams
Author: Jessica Smylie
Author: Carole Aspden
Author: Elizabeth Button
Author: Jack Macartney
Author: Cecilia Okusi
Author: Rachel Byford
Author: Filipa Ferreira
Author: Meredith Leston
Author: Charis Xuan Xie
Author: Mark Joy
Author: Gemma Marsden
Author: Tristan Clark ORCID iD
Author: Simon de Lusignan

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