Antimicrobial Utilisation in 37 Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Units

Author:

Dulhunty J. M.12,Paterson D.13,Webb S. A. R.14,Lipman J.15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

2. Research Fellow, Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, and The Burns, Trauma and Critical Care Research Centre, The University of Queensland.

3. Professor of Medicine, Department of Infectious Diseases, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, and the University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research.

4. Senior Staff Specialist, Intensive Care Unit, Royal Perth Hospital, and School of Medicine and Pharmacology and School of Population Health, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia.

5. Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, and The Burns, Trauma and Critical Care Research Centre, The University of Queensland.

Abstract

This multi-centre point prevalence study reports on antimicrobial dosing patterns, including dose, mode of administration and type of infection, in 37 Australian and New Zealand intensive care units. Of 422 patients admitted to an intensive care unit on 8 May 2007, 195 patients (46%) received antimicrobial treatment, 123 patients (29%) received no antimicrobials and 104 patients (25%) received prophylactic antimicrobials only. Dosing data were available for 331 antimicrobials used to treat 225 infections in 193 patients. Respiratory (40%), abdominal (13%) and blood stream (12%) infections were most common. For adult patients, ticarcillin/clavulanate (23% or 40/177), meropenem (20% or 35/177) and vancomycin (18% or 32/177) were the most frequently used antibiotics; vancomycin was most commonly used in children (31% or 5/16). The majority of antimicrobials were administered as bolus doses or infusions of less than two hours (98% or 317/323); only six patients received extended or continuous infusions. The mode of administration was unknown in eight cases (4.1%). The total defined daily dose for adult patients receiving antimicrobial therapy was 2051 defined daily doses per 1000 patient days. Our results confirm that the use of continuous infusions remains rare, despite increased interest in continuous infusions for time-dependent antibiotics.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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