Effective Antimicrobial StewaRdship StrategIES (ARIES)

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2017
Increasing antimicrobial resistance due to inappropriate antimicrobial use is a global concern. Multi‐disciplinary antimicrobial stewardship teams have become an integral part of the response to this issue. Through prospective review of antibiotic prescriptions and feedback (PRF) to healthcare providers, antimicrobial stewardship has been shown to improve clinical response, reduce adverse effects and mortality. However, this strategy is labor‐intensive to implement and skilled healthcare workers are an expensive and scarce resource. Antibiotic computerized decision support systems (CDSS) have been used to facilitate these processes and may circumvent the limitations of lack of manpower. In previous studies, CDSS led to increased susceptibility of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to imipenem and Enterobacteriaceae to gentamicin and ciprofloxacin, and an overall reduction in broad‐spectrum antibiotic use. CDSS could improve clinical outcomes. Currently, there are limited studies comparing the combined effects of these two strategies. At Tan Tock Seng Hospital, a university teaching hospital in Singapore, antimicrobial stewardship has focused on PRF by a multi‐disciplinary team since 2009. This team reviews piperacillin‐tazobactam and carbapenem orders against hospital antibiotic guidelines from day two of antibiotic prescription. In March 2010, we implemented CDSS triggered at the point of antibiotic ordering and compulsory for the prescriber to review. Prescribers are free to accept or reject the CDSS recommendations. While PRF and CDSS are performed following the same institutional guidelines, there may be differences in physicians' acceptance of recommendations and the accessibility to recommendations between these two interventions. In previous studies, PRF recommendations had an acceptance of 60‐70% while compulsory CDSS was 40%. The investigators hypothesized that compulsory CDSS and PRF would improve clinical outcomes compared with voluntary CDSS and PRF, and compulsory CDSS would improve appropriate antibiotic practice and reduce the requirement for subsequent PRF.
Epistemonikos ID: 977284b067d97510255f5f33f483f07cff9a771a
First added on: May 22, 2024