A retrospective study on bacteriological profile and antibiotics prescription practice in a tertiary level intensive care unit

Authors

  • Kishor Khanal Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal
  • Saroj Poudel Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal
  • Bikash Khadka Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal
  • Anup Ghimire Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal
  • Ashim Regmi Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal
  • Manoj Bist Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal
  • Sanjeet Krishna Shrestha Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/nmmj.v4i1.57136

Keywords:

Antibiotics, Multi-drug resistance, Microorganisms, Escalation, De-escalation

Abstract

BACKGROUND Antibiotics are the most commonly prescribed medicines in intensive care units (ICU). The irrational use of antibiotics leads to the development of multidrug-resistant organisms (MDR). The aim of the study is to determine the bacteriological profile of infections in our ICU and antibiotic prescription practice, before and after the culture results.

METHODOLOGY This is a retrospective study conducted in a tertiary-level, 33-bedded ICU in Nepal to evaluate the bacteriological profile and antibiotic prescription practice. The patients who were admitted between a period of 3 months (January 2023 to March 2023) were enrolled. The data variables collected were; patients' details, culture samples sent (blood, urine, endotracheal (ET) aspirate, sputum, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), wound swab, pleural fluid, ascitic fluid, tissue culture, and peritoneal fluid), gram stain results, culture sensitivity results, empirical antibiotics used, and change in antibiotics following culture results.

RESULTS A total of 378 culture samples were obtained from 230 patients. A positive culture report was obtained for 165 (43.65%) of the 378 samples sent. Urine was the most common sample sent for microbiology (28%), followed by blood (25.3%) and sputum (22.75%). The percentage occurrence of gram-negative bacteria was 84%, while that of gram-positive bacteria was 16%. Methicillin- resistant coagulase-negative staphylococcus (MRCONS) was the most common gram-positive organism isolated (46.15%), and Klebsiella pneumoniae was the most common gram-negative organism (38.84%). Cephalosporin was the commonest group of empirical antibiotics used in our ICU, followed by carbapenem. Empirical antibiotic treatment was continued in 108 patients (47%), changed following the culture results in 92 patients (40%), and discontinued in 30 patients (13%). Escalation of antibiotics was done in 78 patients (85%) and de-escalation in 14 patients (15%).

CONCLUSION Antimicrobial resistance and the irrational prescription of antibiotics can lead to a global economic burden. Hence, antibiotic stewardship programs are required to reduce the irrational prescribing patterns of antibiotics.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
107
PDF
76

Author Biographies

Kishor Khanal, Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

Department of Critical Care

Saroj Poudel, Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

Department of Critical Care

Bikash Khadka, Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

Department of Critical Care

Anup Ghimire, Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

Department of Critical Care

Ashim Regmi, Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

Department of Critical Care

Manoj Bist, Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

Department of Critical Care

Sanjeet Krishna Shrestha, Nepal Mediciti Hospital, Bhaisepati, Laltipur, Nepal

Department of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine

Downloads

Published

2023-07-30

How to Cite

Khanal, K., Poudel, S., Khadka, B., Ghimire, A., Regmi, A., Bist, M., & Shrestha, S. K. (2023). A retrospective study on bacteriological profile and antibiotics prescription practice in a tertiary level intensive care unit. Nepal Mediciti Medical Journal, 4(1), 5–9. https://doi.org/10.3126/nmmj.v4i1.57136

Issue

Section

Original Articles