• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Monitoring Antibiotic Consumption in Pediatrics. How Close to Reality Are Days of Therapy and Recommended Daily Dose Methods?
  • Contributor: Baier, Jan; Höpner, Jens; Haase, Roland; Diexer, Sophie; Stareprawo, Stephanie; Mikolajczyk, Rafael; Moritz, Stefan
  • Published: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022
  • Published in: Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 41 (2022) 4, Seite e126-e132
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1097/inf.0000000000003446
  • ISSN: 0891-3668
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Background: Hospitals are advised to monitor antibiotic use. Several approximation methods do exist to perform this task. Adult cohorts can easily be monitored using the defined daily dose method, or its German adaption recommended daily doses (RDD) method, that seems inapplicable in pediatric cohorts due to body weight variations. Guidelines recommend the days of therapy (DOT) method in pediatrics. Still, there is a need for more detailed analysis regarding the performance of both methods. Methods: Based on data from 4½ years of our fully computerized patient care data managing system in a combined neonatal and pediatric intensive care unit, we compare the results for DOT and RDD per 100 patient days with exact measurement of antibiotic consumption (individual daily dose per 100 patient days) as internal reference. Results: The DOT method reflected antibiotic consumption in our cohort on the level of total consumption, subgroups, and agents with almost always high accuracy (correlation with individual daily dose between 0.73 and 1.00). The RDD method showed poor correlation on the level of total consumption (r = 0.21) and fluctuating results on more detailed levels (correlation, 0.01–0.94). A detailed analysis of body weight distribution and ordered packaging sizes of single agents revealed that RDD seems to work well when only one package size of the agent was ordered in our pharmacy. Conclusion: The DOT method is superior to RDD for monitoring antibiotic drug consumption in pediatric cohorts. RDD seems to work satisfactory well for selected antibiotic agents that are administered with little variation in packaging size.