Volume 26, Issue 5 835209 pp. 253-258
Open Access

Antimicrobial Use Over a Four-Year Period Using Days of Therapy Measurement at a Canadian Pediatric Acute Care Hospital

Bruce R Dalton

Corresponding Author

Bruce R Dalton

Department of Pharmacy Services Alberta Health Services Calgary, Canada , albertahealthservices.ca

O’Brien Institute of Public Health Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

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Sandra J MacTavish

Sandra J MacTavish

Department of Pharmacy Services Alberta Health Services Calgary, Canada , albertahealthservices.ca

School of Pharmacy University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario, canada , uwaterloo.ca

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Lauren C Bresee

Lauren C Bresee

Department of Pharmacy Services Alberta Health Services Calgary, Canada , albertahealthservices.ca

School of Pharmacy University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario, canada , uwaterloo.ca

Department of Community Health Sciences Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary, Canada , ucalgary.ca

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Nipunie Rajapakse

Nipunie Rajapakse

Department of Pediatrics Section of Infectious Diseases University of Calgary, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Department of Medicine Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute Alberta Health Services University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

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Otto Vanderkooi

Otto Vanderkooi

Department of Pediatrics Section of Infectious Diseases University of Calgary, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Department of Medicine Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute Alberta Health Services University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

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Joseph Vayalumkal

Joseph Vayalumkal

Department of Pediatrics Section of Infectious Diseases University of Calgary, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Department of Medicine Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute Alberta Health Services University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

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John Conly

John Conly

Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute Alberta Health Services University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Synder Institute for Chronic Diseases University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

Department of Microbiology Immunology and Infectious Diseases Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary Calgary Alberta, Canada , ucalgary.ca

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First published: 01 January 2015
Citations: 14

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Antimicrobial resistance is a concern that is challenging the ability to treat common infections. Surveillance of antimicrobial use in pediatric acute care institutions is complicated because the common metric unit, the defined daily dose, is problematic for this population.

OBJECTIVE: During a four-year period in which no specific antimicrobial stewardship initiatives were conducted, pediatric antimicrobial use was quantified using days of therapy (DOT) per 100 patient days (PD) (DOT/100 PD) at the Alberta Children’s Hospital (Calgary, Alberta) for benchmarking purposes.

METHODS: Drug use data for systemic antimicrobials administered on wards at the Alberta Children’s Hospital were collected from electronic medication administration records. DOT were calculated and rates were determined using 100 PD as the denominator. Changes over the surveillance period and subgroup proportions were represented graphically and assessed using linear regression.

RESULTS: Total antimicrobial use decreased from 93.6 DOT/100 PD to 75.7 DOT/100 PD (19.1%) over the 2010/2011 through to the 2013/2014 fiscal years. During this period, a 20.0% increase in PD and an essentially stable absolute count of DOT (2.9% decrease) were observed. Overall, antimicrobial use was highest in the pediatric intensive care and oncology units.

DISCUSSION: The exact changes in prescribing patterns that led to the observed reduction in DOT/100 PD with associated increased PD are unclear, but may be a topic for future investigations.

CONCLUSION: Antimicrobial use data from a Canadian acute care pediatric hospital reported in DOT/100 PD were compiled for a four-year time period. These data may be useful for benchmarking purposes.

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