New Antibiotic policy on anvil

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  • #10882

    Wanted: a policy on antibiotics

     

    It needed a scare like NDM-1 for the country to wake up to a policy to regulate antibiotics. But after announcing with much fanfare that a policy would be in place, the government withdrew the decision. We have arrived at a crossroads and there is no solution to the crisis yet. Organisations comprising medical practitioners across the country will come together in Chennai on August 24 to discuss the possibility of evolving a road map that will help the government prepare and implement an antibiotic policy. Physicians, surgeons, gynaecologists, oncologists and representatives from the World Health Organisation and Medical Council of India will deliberate on the need to evolve an antibiotics policy.

    The approach to treating diseases changed after Alexander Fleming’s accidental discovery of penicillin. It was this discovery that saved hundreds of wounded soldiers during World War II. What began in the 1940s turned into a flurry of activity, leading to manufacture of a large number of antibiotics. But soon, everything changed. Today the number of antibiotics manufactured across the world has fallen drastically and adding to the woes is the fact that its unchecked use has resulted in bacteria developing resistance to several antibiotics.

    Across the world, every country has been battling the antibiotic resistance war. Antibiotic resistance would mean that 2.5 million deaths would occur due to infections. Simply put, resistance would mean no more drugs and back to the pre-Fleming days. While other nations have formulated a policy, India has done nothing, says Abdul Gafur, Indian coordinator of World Alliance Against Resistance, who will also coordinate the roadmap meeting in the city.

    What will happen if antibiotics fail? Usually, a doctor would prescribe alternatives to an antibiotic if the patient is found resistant to one set of antibiotics. But rampant misuse of antibiotics has resulted in patients developing resistance to several antibiotics, Dr. Gafur says. The problem is compounded in countries where animals have been fed antibiotics and eating the cultivated meat has passed on resistant strains of the bacteria to humans.

    Some large hospitals in the country follow a routine of culturing bacteria taken from patient samples. When a patient exhibits resistance to a set of antibiotics, she/he is isolated and an infection control protocol to prevent the next patient from acquiring resistance is followed. This protocol should be made mandatory for all hospitals seeking accreditation from the National Accreditation Board for Hospitals, Dr. Gafur says.

    While doctors and smaller hospitals and clinics should follow simple prevention steps such as washing hands between examining patients, wearing gloves and apron while treating a patient with resistant bacteria, larger hospitals should have a vibrant infection control cell, and a policy for rational use of antibiotics. “What we are doing now is crisis management. India needs a practical antibiotics policy which can initially be liberal and later be made stringent,” Dr. Gafur says. All countries are sailing in the same boat. But while some developed countries have started evolving a policy, India is merely observing the situation. A country that has been promoting medical tourism should pay attention to the crisis, Dr. Gafur says.

    #16569
    The available evidence is insufficient to recommend routine antibiotics for dental procedures in persons with joint replacement, according to a new clinical practice guideline from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) and the American Dental Association (ADA). This guideline, titled "Prevention of Orthopaedic Implant Infection in Patients Undergoing Dental Procedures," replaces the previous AAOS Information Statement, "Antibiotic Prophylaxis for Bacteremia in Patients with Joint Replacement."
    A collaborative systematic review of the correlation between dental procedures and prosthetic joint infection (PJI) found no direct evidence of a causal link.
    "It has been long debated that patients with orthopaedic implants, primarily hip and knee replacements, are prone to implant infections from routine dental procedures," David Jevsevar, MD, MBA, chair of the AAOS Evidence Based Practice Committee, said in a news release. "What we found in this analysis is that there is no conclusive evidence that demonstrates a need to routinely administer antibiotics to patients with an orthopaedic implant, who undergo dental procedures."
    In the United States, patients underwent a total of more than 302,000 hip replacements and 658,000 knee replacements in 2010. Mean infection rate is 2%, according to findings from hip and knee replacement studies reviewed by the guideline authors. Infectious organisms may enter the surgical wound during or after the joint replacement procedure, and complications may include surgical drainage or debridement and long courses of antibiotics.
    "This guideline was based primarily on clinical research which examined a large group of patients, all having a prosthetic hip or knee and half with an infected prosthetic joint," AAOS-ADA work group member Elliot Abt, DDS, a general dentist in Skokie, Illinois, and a member of the ADA Council on Scientific Affairs, said in the release. "The research showed that invasive dental procedures, with or without antibiotics, did not increase the odds of developing a prosthetic joint infection."
    The clinical practice guideline includes 3 specific recommendations:
    Practitioners should consider changing their customary practice of prescribing prophylactic antibiotics to patients undergoing dental procedures. This recommendation is based on limited evidence that dental procedures are unrelated to PJI.
    There is no direct evidence that the use of oral topical antimicrobials (ie, topical antibiotic administered by the dentist) before dental procedures will prevent PJI. This is an inconclusive recommendation, in that the guidelines authors were unable to recommend for or against the use of topical oral antimicrobials in patients with prosthetic joint implants or other orthopedic implants
    Good oral hygiene should be maintained. This is the only consensus recommendation in the guideline.
    Clinical Implications
    "As clinicians, we want what is in the best interest of our patients, so this clinical practice guideline is not meant to be a stand-alone document," Dr. Jevsevar, who also is an orthopaedic surgeon in St. George, Utah, said in the release. "Instead it should be used as an educational tool to guide clinicians through treatment decisions with their patients in an effort to improve quality and effectiveness of care."
    Included with the guideline is a shared decision-making tool to facilitate collaborative decision making between patient and clinician and to supplement, but not replace, informed consent procedures. The tool notes that potential adverse effects of routine antibiotic use may include increased bacterial resistance, allergic reactions, diarrhea, and even death. It also notes that immunocompromised patients might be at greater risk for implant infections and that antibiotic use might be considered in this group.
    Those that the authors included as "immunocompromised" were patients who have diabetes mellitus type 1 and type 2, have autoimmune diseases, have post–organ transplant, were receiving chemotherapy, are a bone marrow transplant recipient, were HIV positive, were a chronic steroid user, have obesity, have hemophilia, have malnutrition, have tobacco exposure, have alcohol use, have leukemia or other cancers, have a history of radiation therapy, were taking immunomodulated therapy, or who are elderly.
    Decision about use of prophylactic antibiotics may also be influenced by the oral health status of the patient (eg, is there gingivitis, periodontitis, caries, nonodontogenic infection, or an odontogenic infection?), previous implant infection, time from implant, multiple implants performed, or the presence of at-risk prosthesis (eg, revision prosthesis, prosthesis mechanically failed, megaprosthesis, or endoprosthetic reconstruction).
    "Research is always changing and we need to work to improve clinical research databases, so in the future any type of prospective research done in this area will help shed light on prophylaxis and orthopaedic infection rates," Dr. Jevsevar said in the release.
    In an accompanying editorial, Dr. Jevsevar and Dr. Abt discuss the history of changing recommendations regarding antibiotic prophylaxis for patients with joint replacements undergoing dental procedures, as well as the methodology underlying the current recommendations.
    "The new clinical practice guideline was developed using the published AAOS [clinical practice guideline] development process, and meets or exceeds all recommended Institute of Medicine standards for the development of systematic reviews and clinical practice guidelines except for allowing patient input in the selection of topics and questions," the editorialists write. "Of note, the AAOS [clinical practice guideline] program does not allow members with relevant conflicts of interest, and the collaborating societies followed the same conflict of interest rules in selecting their members."

    "Prevention of Orthopaedic Implant Infection in Patients Undergoing Dental Procedures." AAOS and the ADA. Guideline full text, Editorial full text 

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