Pharmacy (Jun 2020)

Impact of Nasal Swabs on Empiric Treatment of Respiratory Tract Infections (INSERT-RTI)

  • Vanessa Huffman,
  • Diana Carolina Andrade,
  • Jared Ham,
  • Kyle Brown,
  • Leonid Melnitsky,
  • Alejandro Lopez Cohen,
  • Jayesh Parmar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8020101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
p. 101

Abstract

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Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) polymerase-chain-reaction nasal swabs (PCRNS) are a rapid diagnostic tool with a high negative predictive value. A PCRNS plus education “bundle” was implemented to inform clinicians on the utility of PCRNS for anti-MRSA therapy de-escalation in respiratory tract infections (RTI). The study included patients started on vancomycin with a PCRNS order three months before and after bundle implementation. The primary objective was the difference in duration of anti-MRSA therapy (DOT) for RTI. Secondary objectives included hospital length of stay (LOS), anti-MRSA therapy reinitiation, 30-day readmission, in-hospital mortality, and cost. We analyzed 62 of 110 patients screened, 20 in the preintervention and 42 in the postintervention arms. Mean DOT decreased after bundle implementation by 30.3 h (p = 0.039); mean DOT for patients with a negative PCRNS decreased by 39.7 h (p = 0.014). Median cost was lower after intervention [USD$51.69 versus USD$75.30 (p < 0.01)]. No significant difference in LOS, mortality, or readmission existed. The bundle implementation decreased vancomycin therapy and cost without negatively impacting patient outcomes.

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