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Antibiotic Stewardship - APSA Practice Gaps 2019

Video Published 2020-03-03 Updated 2023-08-14

Timestops (9)

00:00:11
Introduction to APSA and their review of knowledge gaps in a…
Introduction to APSA and their review of knowledge gaps in antibiotic stewardship.
00:00:54
Presentation of the case vignette
Presentation of the case vignette: a full-term infant with an Omphalocele.
00:01:36
The central question
The central question: What is the most appropriate antibiotic management for this patient?
00:02:27
Discussion on the timing of antibiotic administration - befo…
Discussion on the timing of antibiotic administration - before or during surgery. Addresses the common practice of givin…
00:03:44
Clarification on when antibiotics are NOT needed for Omphalo…
Clarification on when antibiotics are NOT needed for Omphalocele patients (intact, no maternal fever/chorio). Distinguis…
00:04:22
Addressing the issue of elevated inflammatory markers post-o…
Addressing the issue of elevated inflammatory markers post-op and potential overuse of antibiotics based on these marker…
00:05:27
Discussion on the broader context of antibiotic stewardship …
Discussion on the broader context of antibiotic stewardship and the role of the AAP.
00:06:16
Addressing whether antibiotic overuse is unique to neonatolo…
Addressing whether antibiotic overuse is unique to neonatologists and the importance of multidisciplinary conferences an…
00:06:43
The importance of engaging pediatric colleagues in NICU/PICU…
The importance of engaging pediatric colleagues in NICU/PICU to streamline protocols and ensure adherence to pathways.

Topic Overview

APSA Practice Development Committee addresses antibiotic overuse in neonatal surgical patients, specifically intact omphaloceles. Evidence supports limiting prophylactic antibiotics to one hour pre-incision through 72 hours post-op, rather than empiric treatment at NICU admission based solely on inflammatory markers.

Key Takeaways

  • Neonates with intact omphaloceles do not require antibiotics until surgical intervention, only standard preoperative prophylaxis.
  • Preoperative antibiotics should be given within one hour before incision and discontinued within 72 hours postoperatively.
  • Postoperative inflammatory marker elevation (CRP, procalcitonin) does not automatically indicate need for empiric antibiotic therapy.
  • Antibiotic stewardship in neonatal surgery requires collaboration between surgical and neonatology teams to reduce unnecessary use.
  • Ruptured omphalocele and gastroschisis require antibiotics due to open abdomen; intact lesions managed with 'paint and wait' do not.

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