Importance
Estimates of the incidence of overall antibiotic-associated adverse
drug events (ADEs) in hospitalized patients are generally
unavailable.
Objective To
describe the incidence of antibiotic-associated ADEs for adult
inpatients receiving systemic antibiotic therapy.
Design, Setting, and
Participants Retrospective cohort of adult inpatients admitted to
general medicine wards at an academic medical center.
Exposures At least
24 hours of any parenteral or oral antibiotic therapy.
Main Outcomes and
Measures Medical records of 1488 patients were examined for 30 days
after antibiotic initiation for the development of the following
antibiotic-associated ADEs: gastrointestinal, dermatologic,
musculoskeletal, hematologic, hepatobiliary, renal, cardiac, and
neurologic; and 90 days for the development of Clostridium difficile
infection or incident multidrug-resistant organism infection, based
on adjudication by 2 infectious diseases trained clinicians.
Results In 1488
patients, the median age was 59 years (interquartile range, 49-69
years), and 758 (51%) participants were female. A total of 298 (20%)
patients experienced at least 1 antibiotic-associated ADE.
Furthermore, 56 (20%) non–clinically indicated antibiotic regimens
were associated with an ADE, including 7 cases of C difficile
infection. Every additional 10 days of antibiotic therapy conferred a
3% increased risk of an ADE. The most common ADEs were
gastrointestinal, renal, and hematologic abnormalities, accounting
for 78 (42%), 45 (24%), and 28 (15%) 30-day ADEs, respectively.
Notable differences were identified between the incidence of ADEs
associated with specific antibiotics.
Conclusions and
Relevance Although antibiotics may play a critical role when used
appropriately, our findings underscore the importance of judicious
antibiotic prescribing to reduce the harm that can result from
antibiotic-associated ADEs.
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