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Using Electronically Derived Automated Reports of Appropriate Antibiotic Use to Inform Stewardship Interventions (EMPOWER)

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) logo

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Acute Otitis Media
Community-acquired Pneumonia
Pharyngitis

Treatments

Other: Quasi experimental intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT06027593
75D30121F00002 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
850722 (Other Identifier)
851400 (Other Identifier)
22-019749

Details and patient eligibility

About

The main goal of this study is to use automated electronic reports to assess and improve guideline-concordant antibiotic use for:

1) adult inpatients with community-acquired pneumonia; 2) pediatric inpatients with community-acquired pneumonia; 3) adult outpatients with acute pharyngitis; and 4) pediatric outpatients with acute otitis media.

Full description

Antibiotic stewardship has been shown to improve patient outcomes, decrease adverse events, and decrease antibiotic resistance. This group of investigators previously partnered with collaborators at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and conducted relevant pilot work in developing and validating electronic indicators of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for 8 conditions, amongst which are the four conditions of interest in this study: adult inpatients with community-acquired pneumonia; pediatric inpatients with community-acquired pneumonia; adult outpatients with acute pharyngitis; and pediatric outpatients with acute otitis media. Methods were developed to generate automatic, routine reports to identify elements of inappropriate antibiotic use including; 1) the decision to initiate antibiotic therapy (pharyngitis and acute otitis media only); 2) the choice of antibiotic agent; and 3) the duration of antibiotic use.

The purpose of this project is to assess the impact of these developed electronic indicators on supporting antibiotic stewardship efforts to improve the appropriateness of antibiotic use, as well as the acceptability and feasibility of delivering these reports to prescribers. The investigators aim to:

  1. Refine and validate indicators of appropriate antibiotic use by utilizing Electronic Health Record data, including International Classification of Diseases version 10 codes, medications, laboratory data, co-morbid medical conditions, site of care, clinical documentation, prior hospitalizations, and medication exposure. The researchers will validate the definitions of the various conditions and appropriateness captured electronically with a manual chart review of clinical documentation.
  2. Implement a scalable and sustainable antimicrobial stewardship feedback report-based intervention for these four conditions informed by a rapid user-centered design process.
  3. Track the impact of the stewardship interventions and report to key stakeholders, including prescribers.
  4. Create a publicly available toolkit based on the findings of this project that includes: (i) analytic tools and resources for using the automated reports of key indicators to target stewardship interventions and (ii) an implementation guide to inform the application of automated reports to stewardship in the inpatient and outpatient settings.

If proven effective, these electronic health record-based approaches hold the promise to greatly enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of antimicrobial stewardship initiatives.

Enrollment

26,139 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Patient Inclusion Criteria:

  • Diagnosis of one of four conditions based on ICD-10 diagnostic codes.

Patient Exclusion Criteria:

  • Presence of specific complex chronic conditions
  • Use of immunocompromising medications
  • Transfer from another health facility.

Clinician Inclusion Criteria:

  • Prescribing clinicians (including attending physicians, fellows, residents, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants) at one of the participating outpatient practices or inpatient units.
  • Age ≥ 18 years old
  • Employed by one of the participating sites

Clinician Exclusion Criteria:

  • Volunteers or other non-employee hospital staff
  • Limited English proficiency

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

26,139 participants in 2 patient groups

Pre-Intervention: Patients diagnosed with conditions of interest during study period
No Intervention group
Description:
Four population groups were included in the pre-intervention data: 1) adult inpatients with community acquired pneumonia; 2) pediatric inpatients with community acquired pneumonia; 3) adult outpatients with acute pharyngitis; and 4) pediatric outpatients with acute otitis media
Post-Intervention: Patients diagnosed with conditions of interest during study period
Other group
Description:
Four population groups were included in the post-intervention data: 1) adult inpatients with community acquired pneumonia; 2) pediatric inpatients with community acquired pneumonia; 3) adult outpatients with acute pharyngitis; and 4) pediatric outpatients with acute otitis media
Treatment:
Other: Quasi experimental intervention

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Lauren Dutcher, MD, MSCE; Kathleen Chiotos, MD, MSCE

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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