Balkan Medical Journal (May 2022)

Antibiotic use and Influencing Factors Among Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19: A Multicenter Point-Prevalence Study from Turkey

  • İrfan Şencan,
  • Yasemin Çağ,
  • Oğuz Karabay,
  • Behice Kurtaran,
  • Ertuğrul Güçlü,
  • Aziz Öğütlü,
  • Zehra Demirbaş,
  • Dilek Bulut,
  • Gülden Eser Karlıdağ,
  • Merve Sefa Sayar,
  • Ezgi Gizem Şibar,
  • Oya Özlem Eren Kutsoylu,
  • Gülnur Kul,
  • Serpil Erol,
  • Begüm Bektaş,
  • Tülay Ünver Ulusoy,
  • Semanur Kuzi,
  • Meltem Tasbakan,
  • Özge Yiğit,
  • Nurgül Ceran,
  • Ayşe Seza İnal,
  • Pınar Ergen,
  • Tansu Yamazhan,
  • Hanife Uzar,
  • Canan Ağalar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4274/balkanmedj.galenos.2022.2021-11-62
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39, no. 3
pp. 209 – 217

Abstract

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Background: Broad-spectrum empirical antimicrobials are frequently prescribed for patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) despite the lack of evidence for bacterial coinfection. Aims: We aimed to cross-sectionally determine the frequency of antibiotics use, type of antibiotics prescribed, and the factors influencing antibiotics use in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 confirmed by polymerase chain reaction. Study Design: The study was a national, multicenter, retrospective, and single-day point prevalence study. Methods: This was a national, multicenter, retrospective, and single-day point-prevalence study, conducted in the 24-h period between 00:00 and 24:00 on November 18, 2020, during the start of the second COVID-19 peak in Turkey. Results: A total of 1500 patients hospitalized with a diagnosis of COVID-19 were included in the study. The mean age ± standard deviation of the patients was 65.0 ± 15.5, and 56.2% (n = 843) of these patients were men. Of these hospitalized patients, 11.9% (n = 178) were undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation or ECMO. It was observed that 1118 (74.5%) patients were receiving antibiotics, of which 416 (37.2%) were prescribed a combination of antibiotics. In total, 71.2% of the patients had neither a clinical diagnosis nor microbiological evidence for prescribing antibiotics. In the multivariate logistic regression analysis, hospitalization in a state hospital (p 10 ULT coefficient (p < 0.001), lymphocyte count < 800 (p = 0.007), and clinical diagnosis and/or confirmation by culture (p < 0.001) were found to be independent factors associated with increased antibiotic use. Conclusion: The necessity of empirical antibiotics use in patients with COVID-19 should be reconsidered according to their clinical, imaging, and laboratory findings.