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Antibiotic Review Kit for Hospitals (ARK-Hospital): a stepped wedge cluster randomised controlled trial

medRxiv
2022
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Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Article Description

Background: Strategies to reduce antibiotic overuse in hospitals depend on clinicians taking decisions to stop unnecessary antibiotics. There is a lack of evidence on how support clinicians do this effectively. We evaluated a multifaceted behaviour change intervention (ARK) which aims to reduce antibiotic consumption in hospitals by increasing decisions to stop antibiotics at clinical review. Methods: We performed a stepped-wedge, hospital-level, cluster-randomised controlled trial using computer-generated sequence randomisation of 39 acute hospitals to 7 calendar-time blocks (12/February/2018–01/July/2019). Co-primary outcomes were monthly antibiotic defined-daily-doses (DDD) per acute/medical admission (organisation-level, superiority) and all-cause 30-day mortality (patient-level, non-inferiority, margin 5%). Clusters were eligible if they admitted non-elective medical patients, could identify an intervention “champion” and provide pre-intervention data from February/2016. Sites were followed up for a minimum of 14 months. Intervention effects were assessed using interrupted time series analyses in each cluster. Overall effects were derived through random-effects meta-analysis, using meta-regression to assess heterogeneity in effects across prespecified factors. Trial registration was ISRCTN12674243. Findings: Adjusted estimates showed a year-on-year reduction in antibiotic consumption (-4.8%, 95%CI: -9.1%,-0.2%, p=0.042) following the ARK intervention. Among 7,160,421 acute/medical admissions, we observed a -2.7% (95%CI: -5.7%,+0.3%, p=0.079) immediate and +3.0% (95%CI: - 0.1%,+6.2%, p=0.060) sustained change in adjusted 30-day mortality. This mortality trend was not related to the magnitude of antibiotic reduction achieved (Spearman’s ρ=0.011, p=0.949). Whilst 90-day mortality odds appeared to increase over time (+3.9%, 95%CI:+0.5%,+7.4%, p=0.023), this was not observed among admissions before COVID-19 onset (+3.2%, 95%CI:-1.5%,+8.2%, p=0.182). Length of hospital stay was unaffected. Interpretation: The weak, inconsistent effects of the intervention on mortality are likely to be explained by the COVID-19 pandemic onset during the post-implementation phase. We conclude that the ARK-intervention resulted in sustained, safe reductions in hospital antibiotic use. Funding: NIHR Programme Grants for Applied Research, RP-PG-0514-20015.

Bibliographic Details

Martin J. Llewelyn; Elizabeth L.A. Cross; Eric P. Budgell; Magda Laskawiec-Szkonter; Jack Quaddy; Melissa Dobson; Derrick Crook; Timothy E.A. Peto; Ann Sarah Walker; Rebecca Alexander; Stuart Bond; Phil Coles; Geraldine Conlon-Bingham; Samantha Dymond; Morgan Evans; Rosemary Fok; Kevin J. Frost; Veronica Garcia-Arias; Stephen Glass; Cairine Gormley; Katherine Gray; Clare Hamson; David Harvey; Tim Hills; Shabnam Iyer; Alison Johnson; Nicola Jones; Parmjit Kang; Gloria Kiapi; Damien Mack; Susan Hopkins; Charlotte Makanga; Damian Mawer; Bernie McCullagh; Mariyam Mirfenderesky; Ruth McEwen; Sath Nag; Aaron Nagar; John Northfield; Jean O'Driscoll; Amanda Pegden; Robert Porter; Neil Powell; David Price; Elizabeth Sheridan; Mandy Slatter; Bruce Stewart; Cassandra Watson; Immo Weichert; Katy Sivyer; Marta Santillo; Adele Krusche; Fiona Mowbray; Lucy Yardley; Sarah Wordsworth; Laurence S.J. Roope; Kieran S. Hand; Louella Vaughan

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Medicine

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