Tracking antimicrobial stewardship activities beyond days of therapy (DOT): Comparison of days of antibiotic spectrum coverage (DASC) and DOT at a single center

Even though antimicrobial days of therapy did not significantly decrease during a period of robust stewardship activities at our center, we detected a significant downward trend in antimicrobial spectrum, as measured by days of antibiotic spectrum coverage (DASC). The DASC metric may help more broadly monitor the effect of stewardship activities.

(Received 28 September 2022; accepted 3 December 2022; electronically published 10 January 2023) In the United States, days of therapy (DOT) is the preferred metric for measuring inpatient antimicrobial consumption. 1 In addition, DOT is used for the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) standardized antimicrobial administration ratio (SAAR), which is a comparison of observed DOT to predicted DOT. 2 Although it is widely used, a major disadvantage of DOT is that it does not account for antimicrobial spectrum.
Antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) promote optimal antimicrobial prescribing, including the avoidance of unnecessarily broad-spectrum antimicrobials, through a variety of strategies, such as clinical pathways, education, antimicrobial allergy assessments, and prospective audit and feedback (PAF). [3][4][5] By avoiding unnecessarily broad-spectrum antimicrobials, ASPs can help decrease the risk of developing antimicrobial resistance and Clostridioides difficile infection without a negative impact on clinical outcomes. [6][7][8] However, stewardship efforts to avoid broad-spectrum antimicrobials are not captured by DOT. DOT counts the number of unique antimicrobials per day without taking the spectrum of antimicrobials into account. Furthermore, if a patient is prescribed a combination of 2 or more types of antimicrobials, DOT could be higher while the antimicrobial spectrum is narrower (eg, piperacillin-tazobactam vs ceftriaxone and metronidazole). Although the NHSN provides several metrics that aggregate the use of antimicrobials with similar spectrums of activity (eg, narrow-spectrum β-lactam agents), no single summative metric in the NHSN captures the antimicrobial spectrum for all prescribed agents.
To overcome the limitation of existing metrics, we proposed a new metric for antimicrobial consumption: days of antibiotic spectrum coverage (DASC). DASC is calculated by multiplying DOT and the antibiotic spectrum coverage (ASC) score, which is a summative score of antimicrobial spectrum (Table 1). 9 It is possible that DASC, which captures both antimicrobial spectrum and volume, could better reflect the effect of ASP activities than DOT, but no study has compared the 2 metrics over time in a facility with an active ASP. This study was designed to help address this knowledge gap.
In this study, we evaluated the performance of DASC versus DOT within the Iowa City Veterans' Affairs Healthcare System (ICVAHCS).

Methods
This retrospective study was conducted at the ICVAHCS's acutecare hospital, which has 83 inpatient beds including 10 ICU beds. The ICVAHCS provides care for veterans in eastern Iowa, western Illinois, and northern Missouri. We retrospectively analyzed inpatient antimicrobial use during calendar years 2017 through 2021. During the observational period, the ICVAHCS had an ASP led by 1 infectious diseases (ID) pharmacist (1.0 full-time equivalents or FTE) and 1-2 ID physicians (total, 0.5 FTE). The ASP monitored all inpatients on antimicrobials and performed prospective audit-and-feedback (PAF) every weekday. Our PAF process led to a mean of 9.7 (SD, ±1.9) documented real-time recommendations per week during the study period. Additional ASP activities included a monthly educational lecture to medical residents or students; promotion of a local antimicrobial-prescribing guide available via a free smartphone software application (cf, app); and routine assignment of a clinical pharmacist to each inpatient physician team for assistance with ordering antimicrobials.
Antimicrobial DOT data for each antimicrobial type were obtained from the Veterans' Integrated Service Network (VISN) 23 ASP dashboard, which utilizes real-time antimicrobial usage data from the VHA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW). We aggregated DOT based on published methodology. 10 DASC was calculated based on the methodology described in Supplementary Table 1 (online). We did not calculate DASC for antimicrobials other than antibiotics because ASC was not available for antifungals or antivirals. Patient days (PD) was used as a denominator for both DOT and DASC.
Trends of DOT, DASC and DASC/DOT were analyzed using one-way linear regression accounting for the month of the year to address the variation in antimicrobial prescribing according to seasonality. All analyses were conducted using R version 3.5.0 software (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria).
Antimicrobial consumption data were readily available as a part of the operational quality improvement project. This study was reviewed by the University of Iowa and ICVAHCS Institutional Review Board and was determined to be a quality improvement initiative.

Discussion
In this study, our analysis revealed significant declines over 5 years in antimicrobial spectrum, as measured by DASC, while standard DOT remained stable. This decline in antimicrobial spectrum occurred in the context of robust ASP activities, which included guidance on the initiation of narrow-spectrum antimicrobials and on antimicrobial de-escalation.
Our findings suggest that DASC may be more responsive to stewardship activities than total DOT. Although the benefits of ASP activities at our center could be captured with antimicrobial-specific DOT for high-risk antimicrobials, such as carbapenems or fluoroquinolones, total DOT would be a less informative metric. This is because various stewardship processes at our hospital that encouraged the use of narrow-spectrum over broad-spectrum agents would not affect total DOT or, paradoxically, would increase total DOT if a combination of antimicrobials were prescribed. In contrast, ASP activity at our center did affect DASC, which incorporates both consumption and the spectrum of antimicrobials. Antimicrobial spectrum could be captured by tracking different SAAR antimicrobial agent categories, but DASC provides a summative metric that captures the spectrum of all antimicrobials and is therefore easier to use. Validation of DASC in different hospital settings is necessary before the metric is widely adopted.
This study had several limitations. First, we could not assess the exact reasons why DASC declined without patient-level data and a detailed assessment of ASP activities in this study. We believe ASP's effort to avoid broad-spectrum antimicrobials was the main driver for the decline in DASC because the use of broad-spectrum antimicrobials, such as fluoroquinolones or antipseudomonal agents, declined while the use of narrower antimicrobials increased over the study period. Second, we did not assess how these new metrics were associated with antimicrobial-related clinical outcomes such as emergence of resistant organisms or C. difficile infection incidence. Possibly, reducing DASC was associated with less emergence of antimicrobial resistance, but this hypothesis needs to be confirmed by further research.
In conclusion, DASC per 1,000 patient days and DASC/DOT demonstrated the downward trend of antimicrobial spectrum at our center, which was not captured by DOT. We believe that DASC is a simple but useful metric that should be considered for wider adoption if future studies confirm its responsiveness to stewardship processes and its association with relevant clinical outcomes.