Inpatient antibacterial use trends and patterns, China, 2013–2021
Haishaerjiang Wushouer, Yue Zhou, Wanmeng Zhang, Lin Hu, Kexin Du, Yaoyao Yang, Guiqing Yao, Paul Little, Bo Zheng, Xiaodong Guan, Luwen Shi
Abstract
Objective: To analyse trends and patterns in inpatient antibacterial use in China's tertiary and secondary hospitals between 2013 and 2021. Methods: The analysis involved quarterly data from hospitals covered by China's Center for Antibacterial Surveillance. We obtained information on hospital characteristics (e.g. province, a de-identified hospital code, hospital level and inpatient days) and antibacterial characteristics (e.g. generic name, drug classification, dosage, administration route and usage volume). We quantified antibacterial use as the number of daily defined doses per 100 patient-days. The analysis took into account the World Health Organization's (WHO's) Access, Watch, Reserve classification of antibiotics. Findings: < 0.001). Conclusion: Antibacterial use in inpatients decreased significantly during the study period. However, the rising proportion of last-resort antibacterials used is concerning, as is the large gap between the proportion of antibacterials used belonging to the Access group and WHO's global target of no less than 60%.