ANTIBIOTIC STEWARDSHIP IN NURSING HOMES Philip Sloane, MD, MPH Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Outline of Presentation 1. What is Antibiotic Stewardship and Why Is It Important for Nursing Homes? 2. CMS Mandate for Nursing Homes to Implement Antibiotic Stewardship 3. Key Quality Improvement Targets in Nursing Home Infection Management 4. Developing an Antibiotic Stewardship Program in Your Nursing Home
What is Antibiotic Stewardship? and Why Is It Important for Nursing Homes?
Antibiotic Stewardship Is A set of commitments and activities designed to: - optimize the treatment of infections and - reduce the adverse events associated with antibiotic overuse
In Operational Terms, Antibiotic Stewardship Is. A system of informatics, data collection, personnel, policies and procedures designed to assure that patients get: the right drug at the right time for the right duration
Why Antibiotic Stewardship Is Important for Society Overall and Specifically for Nursing Homes
Worldwide Crisis of Antibiotic Resistance Multi-drug resistance increasingly common Over 20,000 deaths annually in U.S.A. from multidrug resistant infections Projected 317,000 deaths per year by 2050
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20170328-12-questions-we-need-to-prioritise-in-2017
What s Causing the Crisis? 1. Fewer New Antibiotics Being Developed 2. Resistant Strains Spread Rapidly 18 16 14 16 14 12 10 10 8 6 4 7 5 2 0 1983-87 1988-92 1993-97 1998-2002 2003-07 2008-12 1 3. Antibiotics Are Overused
May 26, 2016 at 5:03 PM The superbug that doctors have been dreading just reached the U.S. By Lena H. Sun and Brady Dennis CRE, a family of bacteria pictured, is considered one of the deadliest superbugs because it causes infections that are often resistant to most antibiotics. (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Reuters) For the first time, researchers have found a person in the United States carrying bacteria resistant to antibiotics of last resort, an alarming development that the top U.S. public health official says could mean "the end of the road" for antibiotics. The antibiotic-resistant strain was found last month in the urine of a 49-year-old Pennsylvania woman. Defense Department researchers determined that she carried a strain of E. coli resistant to the antibiotic colistin, according to a study published Thursday in Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, a publication of the American Society for Microbiology. The authors wrote that the discovery "heralds the emergence of a truly pan-drug resistant bacteria." Colistin is the antibiotic of last resort for particularly dangerous types of superbugs, including a family of bacteria known as CRE, which health officials have dubbed "nightmare bacteria." In some instances, these superbugs kill up to 50 percent of patients who become infected. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called CRE among the country's most urgent public health threats.
Why the Focus on Nursing Homes Antibiotic usage tends to be quite high NHs with the highest prescribing rates tend to also have the highest clostridium difficile infection rates Residents LIVE there (as opposed to hospital)
Antibiotic Prescribing Rates across 31 North Carolina Nursing Homes Average # Antibiotic Prescriptions Per Resident in One Year * The Average: Nursing Home Resident 4.6 antibiotic prescriptions per year 1 prescription every 80 days On antibiotics 10% of the time median Nursing Home
Resistant Bacteria Now Commonly Colonize Nursing Home Residents - results of skin, airway, skin and wound cultures in 82 residents - J Clin Micro 50(5); 1698-1703, 2012. Bacterial colonies present MRSA CR- GNR VRE 18% 63% 72% 20 40 60 80 % of Nursing Home Residents with Positive Culture
Reasons Antibiotics Are Prescribed Presumed Skin and Soft Tissue Infection Other Infection The most common other infection is C. difficile Presumed Urinary Infection Respiratory Infection
CMS Mandate for Nursing Homes to Implement Antibiotic Stewardship
42 CFR Parts 405, 431, 447, 482, 483, 485, 488, and 489 Reform of Requirements for Long-Term Care Facilities We are requiring facilities to develop an Infection Prevention and Control Program (IPCP) that includes an Antibiotic Stewardship Program and designate at least one infection Preventionist (IP). That program should include antibiotic use protocols and a system to monitor antibiotic use. Implementation Timetable: Antibiotic Stewardship 11/28/2017 Infection Preventionist (IP) 11/28/2019 IP on Quality Assessment and Assurance Committee 11/28/2019
Yes, This is a policy change Prescribing antibiotics just in case was accepted in the past, but now antibiotics should be given after careful, evidence-based consideration of risks and necessity. This session will provide guidance on key elements of antibiotic stewardship for your nursing home
F Tags that Surveyors Can Cite to Enforce Antibiotic Stewardship Federal Tag 441: Infection Control Federal Tag 329: Unnecessary Drugs Federal Tag 332/333: Medication Errors Federal Tag 428: Drug Regimen Review
Can Antibiotic Use be Safely Reduced?
2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 <== Baseline Education and QI Works: Results from Randomized Trial - Antibiotic Prescriptions Per 100 Resident-Days Follow-Up ==> Intervention Begun Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov 24% Reduction in Intervention Group Intervention Group All Indications Comparison Group All Indications
Antibiotic Prescribing Rates in 28 Minnesota Nursing Homes 6 5 4 Average for 31 North Carolina Nursing Homes Average = 2.19 prescriptions per year 3 2 1 0 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z AA BB
Key Areas for Improvement in Nursing Home Antibiotic Use
Decision-Making Can Be Complicated Nurse Provider Supervisor I learned in nursing school back in 1968 Family Every time mother [Does X] she needs antibiotics
Case #1 Mrs. Jenkins, a 79 year old with stroke, incontinence Wet incontinence pad has odor No complaints Normal vital signs What would you do and why?
Is This Evidence-Based Practice?
What Causes Changes in Urine Color or Odor? Diet Medications Dehydration Bacteria in urine If person is not sick, it s asymptomatic bacteriuria
Is Cloudy or Smelly Urine a Reason To Give Antibiotics? Percent 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Nurses Geriatricians Yes No Geriatr Nurs. 2005 Jul-Aug;26(4):245-51.
What should you do for Mrs. Jenkins? Should you get a urine culture just in case?
Ordering a Urine Culture: A Gateway to Overprescribing? - results of 254 randomly sampled cultures from 31 nursing homes - Antibiotic Prescribing Decision when the Culture was Ordered Culture Result Prescribing Decision when the Result was Reported Received Full Antibiotic Course No antibiotic - 179 cases (70%) - Neg = 68 Pos = 111 17 (25%) were prescribed antibiotic 99 (89%) were prescribed antibiotic 17 99 Antibiotic - 75 cases (30)% - Neg = 21 Pos = 54 2 (10%) stopped and 19 (90%) continued or changed antibiotic 0 (0%) stopped and 54 (100%) continued or changed antibiotic 19 54 Bottom Line: 189 (74%) received a course of antibiotics, although 86% had a temperature less than 99 o F, 74% lacked documentation of any urinary tract-specific signs or symptoms, and only 18% met the modified McGeer criteria for urinary tract infection. Why?
What Happened? Positive cultures were overtreated Negative cultures were ignored Most common reason cultures were ordered was mental status change, which is rarely due to urine infection Interestingly..The two sepsis cases that arose during 7 days post-culture in these 254 patients were from non-urinary sources and had negative urine cultures
Case #2: Two Different People Mrs. White 84 year old with arthritis and moderate dementia Uncooperative with dressing Irritable Eats half of breakfast Says she s tired
Case #2: Two Different People Ms. Blue 34 year old nurse Divorced, alone this weekend You were going to have lunch with her, but she cancels Low energy; not hungry Doesn t want to get dressed Doesn t want to deal with people
Both Have Similar Nonspecific Symptoms * Ms. White 84 year old with arthritis and moderate dementia Uncooperative with dressing Irritable Eats half of breakfast Says she s tired Ms. Blue 34 year old Divorced, alone this weekend Low energy ; not hungry Doesn t want to deal with people Doesn t want to get dressed * Nonspecific Symptoms don t relate to any particular body part or body system
What You Might Say to Your Friend Ms. Blue Coming down with a virus? Too much to drink last night? Didn t sleep well? Pain? Stress? Depression?
What the Nursing Supervisor Says About Ms. White Probably the urine. Needs an antibiotic. Turning to antibiotics as a knee jerk reaction. 36
Jumping to conclusions In nursing homes --- One of the biggest causes of unnecessary antibiotic use In medical decisionmaking the most common reason for medical errors What else could be causing Ms. White s fatigue, irritability, and poor appetite?
The Big Seven: Common Reasons for Nonspecific Symptoms Dehydration Medication side effect Coming down with a virus Didn t sleep well Pain Constipation Stress / anxiety / depression
Active Interventions for Non-Specific Symptoms Assess hydration status (and encourage fluids) Review current medications Look for signs of a respiratory or GI virus Think about sleep problems Ask about pain / discomfort Ask about constipation Look for sources of stress, anxiety or depression Monitor symptoms and vital signs (especially temperature) Use nursing interventions where appropriate Should we get a urine culture just in case
Case 3: Mr. Leonard 76 year old non-smoker 5 days of illness Began with nasal congestion, sore throat Soon cough became main symptom, worse at night Small amount of sputum Decreased appetite, more tired but up and about
More about Mr. Leonard 41 Temperature: 99.4 F Blood Pressure: 130/75 Respiratory rate: 18 Pulse: 75 Pulse ox: 97% Mental status: Baseline Lung exam: Scattered wheezes 1. What is the most likely diagnosis? 2. What treatment(s) are indicated?
What is Mr. Leonard s Diagnosis? Upper Respiratory Infection Nasal congestion Sore throat Sneezing Acute Bronchitis Cough Low grade fever Normal other vital signs/non-focal lung exam (often with expiratory wheezes)
What can be done for acute bronchitis? TO DO: Reassure patient and/or family Monitor vital signs and worsening signs or symptoms Encourage fluids and rest Acetaminophen or NSAIDS for fever/pain Nasal saline spray/humidified air for congestion Cough medicine or inhaled bronchodilator
What About Antibiotics? Most cases of bronchitis are VIRAL and won t improve with antibiotic treatment. 65% of acute bronchitis cases in nursing homes did not follow evidence-based antibiotic treatment guidelines 2d most common reason for inappropriate antibiotic use in NHs J Am Geriatr Soc. 2011 Jun;59(6):1093-8
Common Reasons for Antibiotic Treatment of Viral Respiratory Infections 1. Belief that antibiotics can help 2. Just in case pneumonia develops 3. Meeting patient/family expectations
Do Antibiotics Improve Cold and Bronchitis Symptoms? Antibiotics: DO NOT shorten recovery time or improve symptoms DO increase adverse effects Antibiotics for respiratory symptoms in moderate to severe COPD may be the exception, depending on the clinical situation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Mar 1, 245. Lancet Infect Dis. 2013 Feb;13(2):123-9 Am Jour of Respir and Crit Care Med. 186, 8 (2012); 716-723
Do Antibiotics for Viral Infections Prevent Pneumonia? Antibiotics do reduce pneumonia risk slightly 40 courses are needed to prevent 1 case of pneumonia. If pneumonia develops, antibiotic resistance more likely Nursing home residents with viral respiratory illness must be carefully monitored for signs or symptoms of pneumonia. BMJ. 2007 Nov 10;335(7627):982
But the Family Expects an Antibiotic Studies show: Patient/family expectations for antibiotics are overestimated Satisfaction is not severely impacted when antibiotics not given Communication and education are key Nursing staff have the opportunity to educate and reassure BMJ. 1998 Sep 5;317(7159):637-42. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Apr 30:4. J Gen Intern Med. 2014 Nov 6
How To Talk To Patients And Families About Viral Respiratory Illness Inform that resident is ill and staff is helping them by providing symptom relief and monitoring Advise on illness course Colds: up to 1.5 weeks Bronchitis: up to 3 weeks Respond to concerns Reassure that antibiotics not needed explain risks explain that you will monitor BMJ. 2008;337:a437
What Could You Tell Mr. Leonard s Concerned Family? Advise on illness course: His cough might last several more days to several weeks, and it may take him a while to feel better. Respond to concerns about symptoms: We re going to help him feel more comfortable so his body can fight this virus. He ll need plenty of fluids and rest. Also, we ll give medicine for his fever and cough, and keep an eye on him.
If the Family Asks Specifically About Antibiotics Mr. Leonard s chest cold is caused by a virus, and antibiotics won t help viruses. Giving him antibiotics when they aren t needed can cause side effects and make it so that antibiotics won t work when he really needs them. We will monitor him closely for any change in condition that might indicate a need for antibiotics.
A 82 year old man Had an insect bite on his left leg Has been treating with Triple Antibiotic cream MD saw the leg (see photo), prescribed Bactrim. After several days the patch was no better, prescribed Augmentin Main symptom is itching Case 4: Red Patch on the Leg
Case #5: Weekend Phone Message Bilateral lower extremity edema and redness Resident reports burning sensation Afebrile Nursing home nurse phones on-call MD with request for antibiotic
Emergency Departments and Hospitals: Big Risk, Hard to Control Over Half of C Diff Infections in NHs Occur within a Month Post-Hospital Discharge Source: Pawar et al, ICDHE 2012; 33:1107-12
Reducing Antibiotic Overuse Works: Impact of fluoroquinolone restriction on rates of C. difficile infection in a Community Hospital 2.5 HO-CDAD cases/1,000 pd 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 2005 2006 2007 Month and Year Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2009 Mar;30(3):264-72.
Options Available to Reduce C Diff Post Hospitalization 1. Try to Reduce Antibiotic Burden Re-evaluate need for antibiotics in the first place Re-evaluate duration of antibiotic treatment Re-evaluate choice of antibiotic 2. Probiotics Cochrane review (2013): moderate quality evidence suggests that probiotics are both safe and effective for preventing Clostridium difficileassociated diarrhea Source: Goldenberg, et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 May 31;5:CD006095.
Empirically Chosen Antibiotics for UTI are Often Ineffective (except at promoting resistance) - Data from 75 prescriptions and 1,580 positive cultures in 31 NHs - Antibiotic Prescribed Empirically (% of the time) Percent Resistant (% of isolates) Escherichia Coli (44%) Proteus (13%) Klebsiella pneumoniae (13%) Ciprofloxacin (26%) 57% 69% 11% TMP-SMX (16%) 42% 45% 14% Nitrofurantoin (12%) 4% 98% 23% Ceftriaxone (11%) 17% 7% 11% Levofloxacin (7%) 58% 63% 8%
Recommended Duration of Antibiotic Therapy (non-hospitalized patients) Type of infection Simple UTI (cystitis) COPD exacerbation Pneumonia without sepsis Cellulitis (lower extremity) Sanford Guide, 2015 ID Society David Weber 3 days 1 3 days 1 3 days 3-10 days 2 -- 3-5 days Until afebrile for 3d >5 days 4 >5 days 10 days 3 5 days 5-7 days Actual NH Practice 1 TMP-SMX 3 days; Nitrofurantoin 5-days; 2 Varies with drug, No therapy required in most cases; 3 Not diabetic; 4 Minimum 5 days (should be afebrile 48-72 hours); non-ambulatory treat as HCAP; assess using score for severity
Recommended Duration of Antibiotic Therapy (non-hospitalized patients) Type of infection Simple UTI (cystitis) COPD exacerbation Pneumonia without sepsis Cellulitis (lower extremity) Sanford Guide, 2015 ID Society David Weber Actual NH Practice 3 days 1 3 days 1 3 days 7.5 days 3-10 days 2 -- 3-5 days Until afebrile for 3d >5 days 4 >5 days 7.8 days 10 days 3 5 days 5-7 days 9.6 days 1 TMP-SMX 3 days; Nitrofurantoin 5-days; 2 Varies with drug, No therapy required in most cases; 3 Not diabetic; 4 Minimum 5 days (should be afebrile 48-72 hours); non-ambulatory treat as HCAP; assess using score for severity
Summary: Situations Leading to Antibiotic Overuse 1. Urine appearance and odor 2. Urine test results 3. Nonspecific symptoms 4. Cough 5. Wounds 6. Red and swollen legs 7. Emergency departments and hospitals 8. Empirical antibiotic choice 9. Antibiotic treatment too long
Antibiotic Stewardship Works.sometimes
USING DATA TO MOTIVATE OR REINFORCE CHANGE Antibiotic Use Jan-Apr 2015, by NH 12 Average # Antibiotic Prescriptions Per Resident in One Year 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 E J H G R D T F Y Q W V CC EE Nursing Home Jan-Apr 2015
Change in Antibiotic Use 15-16, by NH 12 Average # Antibiotic Prescriptions Per Resident in One Year 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 E J H G R D T F Y Q W V CC EE Nursing Home Jan-Apr 2015 Jan-Apr 2016
How to Develop an Antibiotic Stewardship Program in Your Nursing Home
#1: Commit Leadership / Create Team Agree to incorporate antibiotic stewardship into facility Quality Assurance and Performance Improvement goals, monitoring, and reporting Identify an infection preventionist (a.k.a. infection control nurse or infection specialist) and provide time Set up an antibiotic stewardship leadership team Communicate expectations to medical and nursing staff
Create an Antibiotic Stewardship Team and Make them Accountable Medical Director Director of Nursing Infection Preventionist Consultant Pharmacist Laboratory ID Consultant
#2: Gather and Report Data Core Outcomes Selected Process Measures Antibiotic prescriptions / 1,000 resident-days Percent of time on antibiotics C difficile infection rate Urine cultures: multidrug resistance rate Rate of hospitalization for sepsis Rate of fever among persons who had antibiotics initiated in the nursing home, by infection site Proportion of prescriptions that are high C diff risk antibiotics, by infection site Urine cultures per 1,000 resident-days
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Infection Tracking Excel Spreadsheets
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Antibiotic Prescribing Portion of Infection Tracking Spreadsheets
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Infection Tracking Excel Spreadsheets
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Infection Tracking Excel Spreadsheets
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Infection Tracking Excel Spreadsheets
#3: Educate Everyone Involved in Decision-Making Nurses Providers Supervisors Residents and Family
#4: Set Goals and Establish Policies Timetable for implementing program Data reporting Education Quality improvement reports? Involvement in collaborative Initial targets
Establishing Policies and Procedures Some say to do this first However, reviewing data and setting facility priorities may be better to do first Best policies and procedures are endorsed by facility staff and updated regularly AMDA will soon publish a report with sample policies and procedures for antibiotic stewardship
Evidence-Based Strategies That Work Communication guidelines for nursing staff around suspected infections SBAR; protocols(e.g, asking for photos of skin problems) Publicizing antibiotic use statistics (QAPI) Antibiotic initiation protocols Antibiotic duration guidelines Antibiotic time-out Protocol for ordering of urine cultures Protocol for management of urine culture results - CRITICAL ROLE OF LEADERSHIP CANNOT BE OVEREMPHASIZED -
Resources
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Implementation Manual A step-by-step guide explaining how to incorporate our materials into a program that will improve outcomes
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Training for Nursing Staff One-hour in-service DVD Pocket cards with key guidelines
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Posters to Provide Periodic Reminders to Staff
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Training for Medical Staff CD-ROM of case discussions by university experts Pocket cards with key guidelines
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Educational Materials for Residents / Families Brochure entitled Why Not Antibiotics Website has 5-minute video
UNC Antibiotic Stewardship Start- Up Package Training DVD for Emergency Department Staff Multidisciplinary case discussions from UNC faculty on emergency department management of nursing home residents
https://nursinghomeinfections.unc.edu/