diagnostic microbiology in antibiotic policy.pptx

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DIAGNOSTIC MICROBIOLOGY IN ANTIBIOTIC POLICY Dr.T.V.Rao MD

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Page 1: Diagnostic Microbiology in Antibiotic Policy.pptx

DIAGNOSTIC MICROBIOLOGY

INANTIBIOTIC POLICY

Dr.T.V.Rao MD

Page 2: Diagnostic Microbiology in Antibiotic Policy.pptx

Improving the Use of Antibiotics a Priority

Improving the use of antibiotics is an important patient safety and public health issue as well as a national priority

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Why take antibiotics?William Osler, MD (1849 - 1919)

"The desire to take medicine is perhaps the greatest feature which distinguishes man from animals."

"One of the first duties of the physician is to Educate the masses not to take medicine"

H. Cushing, Life of Sir William Osler (1925)

Page 4: Diagnostic Microbiology in Antibiotic Policy.pptx

Antibiotics Changed the Human Survival

Antibiotics have transformed the practice of medicine, making once lethal infections readily treatable and making other medical advances, like cancer chemotherapy and organ transplants, possible.

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Fleming Nobel Prize Speech identifies

In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Fleming identified the risk of bacteria becoming resistant to antibiotics. If a bacterium carries several resistance genes, it is called multiresistant or, informally, a "superbug."

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A Changing Landscape forNumbers of Approved Antibacterial Agents

Bars represent number of new antimicrobial agents approved by the FDA during the period listed.

00

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

Num

ber

of a

gent

s ap

prov

ed

1983-87 1988-92 1993-97 1998-02 2003-05 2008

Infectious Diseases Society of America. Bad Bugs, No Drugs. July 2004; Spellberg B et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2004;38:1279-1286;

New antimicrobial agents. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2006;50:1912

Resistance

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Scarcity of New Antibiotics

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What went wrong with Antibiotic Usage

Treating trivial infections / viral Infections with Antibiotics has become routine affair.Many use Antibiotics without knowing the Basic principles of Antibiotic therapy.Many Medical practioners are under pressure for short term solutions.

Page 9: Diagnostic Microbiology in Antibiotic Policy.pptx

Pharmaceutical Industry PushesCommercial

interests of Pharmaceutical industry pushing the Antibiotics, more so Broad spectrum and Newer Generation antibiotics. as every Industry has become profit oriented

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Poverty and Drug Resistance

Poverty encourages drug resistance due to under utilization of appropriate Antibiotics.

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ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE:The role of animal feed

antibiotic additives48% of all antibiotics by weight is added to animal feeds to promote growth. Results in low, sub therapeutic levels which are thought to promote resistance.

Farm families who own chickens feed tetracycline have an increased incidence of tetracycline resistant fecal flora

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Inappropriate use of antibiotics

is a worldwide problemMore than 50% of all medicines are prescribed, dispensed or sold inappropriately, and half of all patients fail to take medicines correctly. The overuse, underuse or misuse of medicines harms people and wastes resources.

More than 50% of all countries do not implement basic policies to promote rational use of medicines.

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Creation of SUPERBUGSAntimicrobial resistance is a serious global challenge. Every continent and country faces the menace of antibiotic resistant “super bugs,” though the extent and the severity of the problem varies. There could be a return to the pre-antibiotic era, where many people could suffer or die from untreatable bacterial infections

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Settings that Foster Drug Resistance

Intensive care unitsOncology unitsDialysis unitsRehab unitsTransplant unitsBurn units

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Treated Without Coordination

When the patients to be treated by several specialists, multiple antibiotics prescribed Drug Antagonism

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Our Indian Hospitals Indian hospitals have reported very high Gram-negative resistance rates, with very high prevalence of ESBL (Extended Spectrum Beta Lactamases) producers and also high carbapenem resistance rates.

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Misuse of Antibiotics Drives Antibiotic Resistance

Studies prove that misuse of antibiotics may cause patients to become colonized or infected with antibiotic-resistant bacteria, such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) and highly-resistant Gram-negative bacilli.

Misuse of antibiotics is also associated with an increased incidence of Clostridium difficle infections.

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Pan Drug Resistant InfectionsIncreasing carbapenem

resistance will invariably result in increased usage of colistin, currently the last line of defence, with a potential for colistin-resistant and Pan Drug Resistant bacterial infections

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Can we tackle the Problem India, with more than

20,000 hospitals, more than a billion population, wide cultural diversity, socio-economic disparity, and a large medical community of more than three-fourths of a million doctors, will find the resistance problem an issue very difficult to tackle

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Why is an antibiotic policy necessary?

An antibiotic policy will: Improve patient care by promoting the best practice in antibiotic prophylaxis and therapy, Make better use of resources by using cheaper drugs where possible Retard the emergence and spread of multiple antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Improve education of junior doctors by providing guidelines for appropriate therapy Eliminate the use of unnecessary or ineffective antibiotics and restrict the use of expensive or unnecessarily powerful ones

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An antibiotic policy will:

Improve patient care by promoting the best practice in antibiotic prophylaxis and therapy,

Make better use of resources by using cheaper drugs where possible

Retard the emergence and spread of multiple antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

*Improve education of junior doctors by providing guidelines for appropriate therapy

Eliminate the use of unnecessary or ineffective antibiotics and restrict the use of expensive or unnecessarily powerful ones

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Aim of Antibiotic Policy

Reduce the Antimicrobial resistanceInitiate best efforts in the hospital area as many resistance Bacteria are generated in Hospital areas and in particular critical care areas.Initiate good hygienic practices so these bacteria do not spread to othersPractice best efforts, these resistance strains do not spill into critically ill patients in the Hospital

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Objectives of Antibiotic Policy.

Antibiotics should not be used casuallyPolicy emphasizes, avoiding the use of powerful Antibiotics in the Initial treatments.We should create awareness that we are sparing the powerful Broad spectrum Drugs for later treatment

Patient saves Money

Doctors save Lives.

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Aims of the Antibiotic Policy

Create awareness on Antibiotics as misuse is counterproductive.

More effective treatments in serious Infections.

Reduce Health care associated infections spilling to society and increase of Community associated Infections.

( A growing concern in Developing world )

Page 25: Diagnostic Microbiology in Antibiotic Policy.pptx

Policy Deals on Broad Basis

Clinicians / Microbiologists / Pharmacists and Nurses do take part.Policies are framed on demands of the Clinical areas, depending on recent Infection surveillance data contributed from Microbiology Departments.

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The 3 Stratagecies Will it Work ?Complete ban on OTC sale of antibiotics

without prescription throughout the country?.

Complete ban of OTC sale of antibiotics without prescription in metros and larger cities with a more liberal approach in smaller cities and villages.

A liberal approach throughout the country to start with, with an initial list of antibiotics under restriction and addition of other drugs to the list in a phased manner.

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Education On Antibiotic policy

Acton plan for Education to all concerned clinical staff on Antibiotic prescriptions. Evaluate the feed back of success and failures of the policy.Create Infection surveillance DataDeveloping facilities in Microbiology departments for auditing data and guidanceRestrictions in prescribing and Antibiotic availability.A continuous education to Junior Doctors

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Role of Microbiology Departments Microbiology labs

should issue hospital Antibiogram at pre-defined intervals. Those hospitals without good laboratory support should be willing to outsource samples to better laboratories.

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Role of Microbiology Departments

The system of notification of communicable diseases is a popular, established, though not strictly followed system in the country. Multidrug-resistant bacteria, especially pan-drug resistant bacteria, must be considered as a notifiable entity. Such a reporting system should complement national antimicrobial resistance surveillance studies.

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Better services from Microbiology Departments.

Basic infrastructure should be updated for detection of MRSA and ESBL and Carbapenamase producers.Documentation of all Opportunistic infections. and Hospital infection outbreaks

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CarbapenemasesAbility to hydrolyze penicillins, cephalosporins, monobactams, and carbapenems

Resilient against inhibition by all commercially viable ß-lactamase inhibitors

Subgroup 2df: OXA (23 and 48) carbapenemases

Subgroup 2f : serine carbapenemases from molecular class A: GES and KPC

Subgroup 3b contains a smaller group of MBLs that preferentially hydrolyze carbapenems

IMP and VIM enzymes that have appeared globally, most frequently in non-fermentative bacteria but also in Enterobacteriaceae

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Notifying Pan Resistant Microbes

Superbugs Pan-drug-resistant Gram-negatives, carbapenem-resistant Gram-Negatives, Vancomycin- resistant Enterococcus and MRSA should be made notifiable

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Curriculum changeStructured training in antibiotic

usage and infection control should be introduced in both UG and PG curriculum.Infectious Diseases training in UG and PG curriculum in all specialties.

Antibiotic stewardship and infection control one week rotation-3rd, 4th, and final year MBBS.

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WHONET DocumentationWhy We Need It

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What is WHONETWHONET is a free software developed by the WHO Collaborating Centre for Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance for laboratory-based surveillance of infectious diseases and antimicrobial resistance.

The principal goals of the software are:

1 to enhance local use of laboratory data; and

2 to promote national and international collaboration through the exchange of data.

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The understanding of the local epidemiology of microbial populations; the selection of antimicrobial agents; the identification of hospital and community outbreaks; and the recognition of quality assurance problems in laboratory testing.

Whonet helps us in ……

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All the Documented results are analyzed in WHONETThe heart of

WHONET is a software package designed to collect the results of antibiotic resistance tests. Researchers / Microbiologists feed the results into a computer and look for trends

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Legacy computer systems, quality improvement teams, and strategies for optimizing antibiotic use have the potential to stabilize resistance and reduce costs by encouraging heterogeneous prescribing patterns and use of local susceptibility patterns to inform empiric treatment.

Implementation of WHONET CAN HELP TO MONITOR

RESISTANCE

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Physicians Can ImpactOther clinicians

Patients

Optimize patient evaluation Adopt judicious antibiotic

prescribing practicesImmunize patients

Optimize consultations with other clinicians

Use infection control measuresEducate others about judicious

use of antibiotics

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Best way to keep the matters in Order

Every Hospital should have a policy which is practicable to their circumstances. The *Seniors physician in the respective

departments will make the best policy Rigid guidelines without coordination

will lead to greater failures The only way to keep Antimicrobial

agents useful is to use them appropriately and Judiciously

(Burke A.Cunha, MD,MACP Antimicrobial Therapy. Medical Clinics of North America NOV 2006)

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Our minimal Targets

List of available antibiotics agreed by all clinicians, indicating dosages, routes of administration and toxicities.

Guidelines for therapy and prophylaxis.

A regimen selection algorithm also might be included in an antibiotic policy.

CLSI guidelines are already followed

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IMAGINE A WORLD WITHOUT ANTIBIOTICS

A world without effective antibiotics is a terrifying but real prospect. Overuse of antibiotics has led to dangerous outbreaks of drug resistant disease, and puts us in very real danger of a global pandemic. In future we have to use ???

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Collect microbiology Specimens Before Antibiotic

Therapy Nurses and Resident doctors can assure that cultures are performed before starting antibiotics. In addition, nurses review medications as part of their routine duties and can prompt discussions of antibiotic treatment, indication, and duration

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Never Forget Optimal Specimen Collection a Top

Priority

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STOP MISUSE OF Antibiotics and Start

Washing Hands

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Programme Created by Dr.T.V.Rao MD for Medical Microbiologists for the Improvements in Global Health

care Email

[email protected]