Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2021, point prevalence survey (PPS) showed 51.2% inpatients at Singapore General Hospital (SGH) was prescribed ≥ 1 antibiotic, higher than many developed countries. Notably, % surgical inpatients on antibiotics were high at 59.7%. Among patients who received surgical prophylaxis (SP), 63.7% had SP > 24 hours. In addition to existing antibiotic stewardship program (ASP) strategies (e.g. prospective audit feedback, computerized clinical decision support system), ASP introduced a series of new strategies from 2021, involving digital solutions, handshake stewardship and project collaborations with surgeons to improve antibiotic prescribing [Figure 1]. [Figure: see text] METHODS: PPS was conducted annually using standardized Global-PPS protocol from 2021 to 2024 among surgical inpatients. The % of inpatients on antibiotics, antibiotic related information and quality indicators were collected. In addition, presence of surgical site infections (SSI), as defined by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was compared in patients prescribed ≤ 24 hours and > 24 hours of SP. [Figure: see text] RESULTS: The % surgical inpatients prescribed with antibiotics steadily decreased from 59.7% (2021) to 54.1% (2024) [Figure 2]; an average of ∼1.9% reduction/year (translating to ∼3,500 antibiotic-free days/year). Notably, PPS showed improvement in documenting antibiotic indication, stop/review date and compliance to hospital antibiotic guidelines over time, suggesting that doctors were more cognizant about appropriate antibiotic prescribing [Figure 3]. In patients prescribed with SP, % patients with SP > 24 hours decreased from 63.7% (2021) to 52.2% (2023) [Figure 4]. There was no difference in SSI between patients who received ≤ 24 hours and > 24 hours of SAP (2/193, 1.0% vs 8/247, 3.2%, p=0.2). [Figure: see text] CONCLUSION: PPS is a useful tool to evaluate the effectiveness of ASP strategies on antibiotic use. With the introduction of new digital solutions and reinforcing handshake stewardship via greater physician engagement and collaboration, % of surgical inpatients on antibiotics has reduced steadily over the years. The % patients prescribed > 24 hours of SP has also reduced. ASP must remain adaptable in integrating innovative initiatives to educate and engage prescribers to further improve antibiotic prescribing. [Figure: see text] DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures