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Impact of an Antibiotic Side-Chain–Based Cross-reactivity Chart Combined With Enhanced Allergy Assessment Processes for Surgical Prophylaxis Antimicrobials in Patients With β-Lactam Allergies

Curtis D. Collins, Caleb Scheidel, Kishore Anam, Shikha Polega, Anurag N. Malani, Alexandra Hayward, Harvey L. Leo, Tara Shankar, Cheryl Morrin, Kara K. Brockhaus

2020Clinical Infectious Diseases31 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: β-Lactam antibiotics are first-line therapy for perioperative prophylaxis; however, patient-reported allergies often lead to increased prescribing of alternative antibiotics that may increase the incidence of surgical site infections. The R-group side chain of the β-lactam ring is responsible for allergic cross-reactivity and experts recommend the use of β-lactams that are structurally dissimilar. METHODS: An internally developed, antibiotic side-chain-based cross-reactivity chart was developed and implemented alongside enhanced allergy assessment processes. This single-center, quasi-experimental study analyzed antibiotic prescribing in all adult patients with a documented β-lactam allergy undergoing an inpatient surgical procedure between quartile (Q) 1 (2012)-Q3 (2014) (historical group) and Q3 (2016)-Q3 (2018) (intervention group). Propensity-weighted scoring analyses compared categorical and continuous outcomes. Interrupted time-series analysis further analyzed key outcomes. RESULTS: A total of 1119 and 1089 patients were included in the historical and intervention cohorts, respectively. There was a significant difference in patients receiving a β-lactam alternative antibiotic between cohorts (84.9% vs 15.1%; P < .001). There was a decrease in 30-day readmissions in the intervention cohort (7.9% vs 6.3%; P = .035); however, there was no difference in the incidence of SSIs in patients readmitted (14.8% vs 13%; P = .765). No significant differences were observed in allergic reactions (0.5% vs 0.3%; P = .323), surgical site infections, in-hospital and 30-day mortality, healthcare facility-onset Clostridiodes difficile infection, acute kidney injury, or hospital costs. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of an antibiotic cross-reactivity chart combined with enhanced allergy assessment processes significantly improved the prescribing of β-lactam antibiotics for surgical prophylaxis.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAntibioticsAllergyIncidence (geometry)CohortInternal medicinePerioperativeAntibiotic prophylaxisDrug allergyPediatricsIntensive care medicineSurgeryImmunologyBiologyPhysicsOpticsMicrobiologyDrug-Induced Adverse ReactionsSurgical site infection preventionNosocomial Infections in ICU
Impact of an Antibiotic Side-Chain–Based Cross-reactivity Chart Combined With Enhanced Allergy Assessment Processes for Surgical Prophylaxis Antimicrobials in Patients With β-Lactam Allergies | Litcius