Inter-hospital variation in the utilization of diagnostics and their proportionality in the management of adult community-acquired pneumonia
Files
Publication date
2018-12-25
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Background: Utilization of diagnostics and biomarkers are the second largest cost drivers in the management of patients hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). The present study aimed to systematically assess the inter-hospital variation in these cost drivers in relation to antibiotic use in CAP. Methods: Detailed resource utilization data from 300 patients who participated in a multicenter placebo-controlled trial investigating dexamethasone as adjunctive treatment for community-acquired pneumonia was grouped into 3 categories: clinical chemistry testing, radiological exams, and microbiological testing. Based on the identified top 5 items per category, average costs were calculated per category and per hospital. Antibiotic de-escalation at day 3 and secondary ICU admission were assessed as outcomes for proportionality of diagnostics use. Results: The mean costs for diagnostics varied between hospitals from 350 (SD 31) to 841 (SD 37) euro per patient (p < 0.001). This difference was primarily explained by variation in costs for microbiological testing (mean 195 vs. 726 euro per patient, p < 0.001). There was no difference in number of secondary ICU admissions but there was an inverse association between the costs of microbiological testing and level of antibiotic de-escalation. De-escalation occurred most frequently in the hospital with the lowest cost for microbiological testing (48% vs. 30%; p = 0.018). The latter hospital had an automated physician alert system in place to consider a timely iv-to-oral switch of antibiotics. Conclusions: Large inter-hospital variation exists in resource utilization, mainly in microbiological diagnostics in the management of adult patients with community-acquired pneumonia. A counterintuitive inverse association between the magnitude of these costs and the amount of antibiotic de-escalation was found. Future studies about the optimal cost-effective set of microbiological testing for antimicrobial stewardship in pneumonia patients should acknowledge the interaction between testing, way of communication of results and triggered physician alert systems. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01743755.
Keywords
Community-acquired pneumonia, Costs and cost analysis, Microbiological testing, Antimicrobial stewardship, Choosing wisely
Citation
Vestjens, S M T, Wittermans, E, Spoorenberg, S M C, Grutters, J C, van Ruitenbeek, C A, Voorn, G P, Bos, W J W & van de Garde, E M W 2018, 'Inter-hospital variation in the utilization of diagnostics and their proportionality in the management of adult community-acquired pneumonia', Pneumonia, vol. 10, no. 15, 15. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41479-018-0059-0