Table 1.
Author | Year | Study design | Primary outcome | Secondary outcomes | Population | Intervention | Statistical significance (primary) | Statistical significance (secondary) | N | Quality | Acceptance rate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
dos Santos[11] | 2019 | Quasi-experimental | Antimicrobial consumption | “Appropriateness,” antimicrobial resistance hand rub use, cost | 55-bed community hospital in Brazil | PAF1 | Significant reductions in the consumption of fluoroquinolones, first-generation cephalosporins, and ceftriaxone | “Appropriateness” and cost. Decrease in the rate of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter spp. isolation | 11,088 prescriptions for 6163 patients | *** | Not reported |
Stevenson[12] | 2018 | Prospective quasi-experimental pilot study | Provider perceptions | Recommendation acceptance rate | Two rural VAMCs2 342 total acute-care and long-term care beds | Weekly meetings to discuss cases | N/A | N/A | 259 cases over 78 sessions between both sites | * | 73% |
Shively[13] | 2020 | Prospective observational, semi-structured interviews | Antimicrobial consumption | ID consultation, cost | Two community hospitals with 461 total beds | PAF, Restriction, guideline development, provider education | Broad spectrum antimicrobial utilization decreased by 24.2% (341.1 vs. 258.7 DOT/1000 PDs – p < 0.001 | ID consultation increased from 15.4 consults per 1000 PDs compared to 21.5 consults per 1000 PDs (p = 0.001). Estimated annualized savings $142,629.83 | 78,339 PDs3 prior to intervention; 37,639 PDs after intervention | *** | 88.9% |
Beaulac[14] | 2016 | Uninterrupted time series analysis | Antimicrobial consumption | HA-CDI4, antimicrobial consumption by group | 212 bed LTACH5 | Daily audits of EMR6 with PAF via e-mail | Non-significant decrease in absolute consumption 32.8 DDD7/1000 PD (95% CI, − 77.0 to 11.4) (p = 0.14); significant change in slope from before to after the program (− 6.58 DDD/1000 PD per month [95% CI, − 11.48 to − 1.67]; p = 0.01) | Decrease HA-CDI (incidence rate ratio, 0.57 [95% CI, 0.35–0.92]; p = 0.02). Decrease anti-MRSA antibiotic use, decrease CDI therapy, increased antipseudomonal agents | 885 recommendations about 734 patients | ** | 48% |
dos Santos[15] | 2013 | Prospective observational | Appropriateness of empiric therapy | Appropriateness of empiric pneumonia therapy | 50-bed community hospital in Brazil | Web-based consultation portal for providers | Significant increase in local guideline appropriate empiric therapy. 60% of prescriptions after interventions compared to 40% before. (p < 0.01) | Guideline appropriate empiric pneumonia therapy increased from 41 to 63% after intervention (p = 0.01) | 81 consult requests | ** | 100% |
Wilson[16] | 2019 | Prospective observational | Antimicrobial consumption | Duration of therapy, Mean ASI8, DOT9 per antibiotic class, ratio of DOT to antibiotic exposure, mean LOS, mortality | Two rural VAMCs 342 total acute care and long-term care beds | Weekly meetings to discuss cases | Significant decrease, in overall antibiotic DOT in acute and long-term care at both sites ranging from 8 to 22% all p < 0.001 | ASI decreased in acute/long-term care at site A (p < 0.001), but unchanged to increase at site B. Only site A acute care had decreased length of therapy (p < 0.001). At site A fluoroquinolone and broad-spectrum beta-lactams usage decreased in acute + LTC. No change in LOS10 or mortality | 259 cases over 78 sites between both sites | ** | not reported |
Yam[17] | 2012 | Observational | Number of ASP interventions | Rate of narrowing therapy to culture results, agreement between local ASP and remote ID physician, cost, CDI | 141-bed rural community hospital | Develop local ASP with remote ID physician support. PAF, Cascade reporting | N/A | N/A | 311 cases | * | 86–100% |
Ceradini[18] | 2017 | Observational “before and after” | Incidence of multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae | HAI infections, LOS, cost, satisfaction, consumption | 220-bed pediatric hospital “suburban” | Case discussion | Rate of multidrug-resistant organism isolation decreased from 104/1000 PDs to 79/1000 PDs. (p < 0.01) | No for LOS, HAI. N/A for others | 683 patients to establish baseline: 531 patients post-intervention | ** | not reported |
Yan[19] | 2020 | Randomized control trial | Antimicrobial prescribing rate | Diagnostic shifting to mask inappropriate prescribing | Physicians practicing primary care via telemedicine. (outpatient) | Education compared to individualized feedback on prescribing patterns | For URI11 and bronchitis, there was a greater decrease in antibiotic prescription in the intervention group compared with the control group (decrease from 15 to 7.8% of prescriptions for URI diagnosis and 64 to 32.1% for bronchitis compared to control groups p < 0.001) | OR of visits with sinusitis or pharyngitis increased in the post-period compared with that in the pre-intervention period (aOR 1.36, 95% CI [1.29, 1.44], p < 0.001). However, a larger diagnostic shift was seen in the control group | 31,473 visits in education arm and 25,519 visits in intervention arm met enrollment criteria | **** | N/A |
Wood[20] | 2015 | Observational | Antimicrobial consumption | Cost, consumption by class, antimicrobial resistance | 6 community hospitals within one health system -413 total beds | PAF | No significant decrease in total antimicrobial consumption | Quinolone use decreased 57.4% in hospital B (p = 0.001), 65.9% in hospital D (p < 0.001), and 67.3% in hospital E (p < 0.001). Hospitals B, D, and E also had statistically significant decreases in antipseudomonal prescribing Average cost savings of $20,860.25 over 18 months | 12,904 charts reviewed between the 6 sites | ** | 81–95% |
Morquin[21] | 2018 | Prospective observational | Adherence to recommendations | Provider perceptions of program | 2000-bed academic hospital system | PAF | N/A; 79% of diagnostic and 87% of therapeutic recommendations were accepted | N/A; most approved of the program | 6994 chart reviews for 4173 inpatients | * | 79–87% |
Howell[22] | 2019 | Prospective observational | Time commitment | Barriers, cost | 110-bed small community hospital | PAF | N/A, 3039 min over 3.5 months. 218 min per week or 3.6 h/week. 41.1% time spent on data analysis, 20.5% reporting, 18.4% preparing for meetings, 14.6% on education, and 5.4% spent on regulatory protocols and policies | N/A, barriers—workflow, communication, consistency. Average cost savings of $17,411.02 for patients with accepted ASP interventions compared to those rejected | 724 alerts on 553 patients | * | 11% |
1PAF, prospective audit and feedback
2VAMC, Veterans Affairs Medical Center
3PD, patient days
4HA-CDI, hospital-acquired Clostridioides difficile infection
5LTACH, long-term acute care hospital
6EMR, electronic medical record
7DDD, defined daily doses
8ASI, antibiotic spectrum index
9DOT, days of therapy
10LOS, length of stay
11URI, upper respiratory tract infection