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MAJOR ARTICLE Physicians’ Acceptable Treatment Failure Rates in Antibiotic Therapy for Coagulase-Negative Staphylococcal Catheter-Associated Bacteremia: Implications for Reducing Treatment Duration Eli N. Perencevich,1,2 Anthony D. Harris,1,2 Keith S. Kaye,3 Douglas D. Bradham,1,2 David N. Fisman,4 Laura A. Liedtke,5 Larry J. Strausbaugh,6 and the Infectious Diseases Society of America Emerging Infections Network 1 Veterans Affairs Maryland Healthcare System and 2Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; 3Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina; 4Drexel University School of Public Health, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and 5Research Services and 6Infectious Disease Section, Medical Service, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Portland, Oregon Background. Decreasing the duration of antimicrobial therapy is an attractive strategy for delaying the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. Limited data regarding optimal treatment durations for most clinical infections hinder the adoption of this approach and impair optimal physician-patient communication under the shared decision-making model. We aimed to identify acceptable failure rates among infectious disease consultants (IDCs) for treatment of central venous catheter–associated bacteremia. Methods. A case scenario involving a representative patient who developed central venous catheter–associated bacteremia caused by coagulase-negative staphylococci and who received standard-of-care therapy was distributed to all nonpediatric IDC members of the Infectious Diseases Society of America’s Emerging Infections Network in August 2003. Each member was suggested 1 of 10 treatment failure rates and asked whether he or she would accept or reject the given value. Logistic regression was used to evaluate the relationship between specific failure rates offered to respondents and their willingness to accept them using a methodology derived from contingent valuation. Results. Among the 374 respondents (response rate, 54%), the median acceptable failure rate was 6.8%. Thus, one-half of the IDCs would have found a failure rate of 6.8% to be acceptable. Seventy-five percent of IDCs would have found a failure rate of 1.6% to be acceptable, and 25% of IDCs would have found a failure rate as high as 11.9% to be acceptable. Conclusions. The quantified acceptable failure rates, when used to interpret clinical trial or cohort study results, will help select optimal antimicrobial therapy durations for this specific condition. These findings are a critical step in the development of effective shared decision-making models. Concerns about the emergence of vancomycin-resistant enterococci and staphylococci have prompted recommendations to reduce overall use of these agents. Some researchers have proposed retarding the emergence of resistance by decreasing the duration of antimicrobial Received 25 May 2005; accepted 11 August 2005; electronically published 10 November 2005. Presented in part: 14th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 17–20 April 2004 (abstract 97). Reprints or correspondence: Dr. Eli Perencevich, VA Maryland Health Care System, 100 N. Greene St., Lower Level, Baltimore, MD 21201 (eperence @epi.umaryland.edu). Clinical Infectious Diseases 2005; 41:1734–41 2005 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. 1058-4838/2005/4112-0008$15.00 1734 • CID 2005:41 (15 December) • Perencevich et al. therapy [1]. Unfortunately, very few clinical studies have attempted to determine optimal treatment durations for conditions commonly treated with vancomycin. In the absence of such studies, many physicians likely prescribe antibiotics for inordinate lengths of time, because, as a group, physicians are risk averse [2, 3]. Few studies have addressed physician risk preference for acceptable antimicrobial therapeutic failure rates or their impact on treatment duration [4]. This study evaluated acceptable failure rates for vancomycin therapy of central venous catheter (CVC)– associated coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia among a cohort of infectious disease consultants (IDCs). Physician preferences were elicited with a re- alistic clinical vignette and assessed with methodology derived from contingent valuation. The results delineate an acceptable treatment failure threshold. Because decisions regarding changing the duration of antibiotic therapy are likely to be characterized by implicit trade-off between the likelihood of therapeutic success and the likelihood of complications, we sought to establish a range of failure rates that might be considered tolerable or “normative” by specialist physicians. These findings, in conjunction with results of clinical trials or cohort studies, may facilitate selection of optimal durations of antimicrobial therapy for this condition. METHODS Pilot studies. We developed a realistic case scenario, which included the history, physical examination findings, test results, and treatment plan for a 50-year-old patient who developed CVC-associated bacteremia caused by coagulase-negative staphylococci after undergoing cardiac surgery. Management included removal of the line and a standard course of vancomycin therapy. We distributed the clinical vignette to 5 nationally recognized experts in infectious diseases, asking for their opinions about the case and an estimate of the treatment failure rate that would be tolerable or acceptable, assuming “standard of care” treatment. Treatment failure was defined as “the patient having blood cultures obtained from a peripheral vein positive for coagulase-negative staphylococci 3–5 days after completion of the vancomycin therapy.” After receipt of comments and estimated failure rates from the expert physicians, we modified the clinical description and sent it to 55 IDCs who practiced in both academic medical centers and community hospitals. We asked these 55 IDCs to provide the treatment failure rate that they would find acceptable, given the treatment standard of care plan that was outlined. In this pilot study, 21 IDCs received an open-ended question and a request to determine the acceptable failure rate, and 34 IDCs received 5 ranges of failure rates in a multiplechoice format. The 21 IDCs who received the open-ended questionnaires reported a mean acceptable failure rate (SD) of 6.3% 6.7% and a median acceptable failure rate of 5% (range, 0%– 25%). The 34 IDCs who completed the multiple-choice portion of the pilot study reported a median acceptable failure rate of 10.1% but !1%, with 91% of responses indicating an acceptable failure rate of !2% and none accepting a failure rate of 15%. We used these pilot study results to determine the 10 possible acceptable failure rates proffered in the formal Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) Emerging Infections Network (EIN) survey. Study subjects. The EIN is a provider-based sentinel network, established by a Cooperative Agreement Program Award from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 1995. It consists of IDCs who belong to either the IDSA or the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, who regularly engage in clinical activity, and who volunteer to participate in network activities. Questionnaire. In August 2003, the EIN distributed questionnaires titled “Failure Rates for Therapy of Bacteremia Associated with Central Venous Catheters” via facsimile and email to 687 members in North America who practice as adult IDCs. Nonresponders received a second and third survey 2 and 4 weeks later, respectively. The surveys included a 1-page introduction to the topic, a 1-page clinical vignette, and the questionnaire (appendix 1, figure A1) Treatment failure was defined as it was in the pilot study. However, instead of offering an open-ended or multiplechoice question, the EIN questionnaire offered its members a specific failure rate to accept or reject, assuming “standard of care” therapy. In all 3 distributions, individual members received the same acceptable failure rate, which they could accept or reject. Results from the pilot study established the range of acceptable failure rates. To capture all likely values, we set the upper range of failure rates at 30%, because 1 IDC in the open-ended pilot questionnaire reported a 25% failure rate as acceptable. For the lower range, we selected 0.01%, because 2 IDCs in the openended question group reported 0% and 0.5% as acceptable failure rates, and 4 in the multiple-choice group selected “less than !0.1%” as an acceptable failure rate. We then established a range of 10 acceptable failure rates that were used in the EIN survey instrument as possible choices. Because the median failure rate in the open-ended portion of the pilot study was 5%, and because the most frequently selected responses in the multiple-choice portion of the pilot study were “0.1% to 1%” and “1% to 2%,” we selected the following 10 choices for acceptable failure rates in the EIN survey: 0.01%, 0.1%, 1%, 2%, 3%, 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, and 30%. Furthermore, we anticipated that 300 members would respond to the survey. Thus, on average, we expected that 30 IDCs would respond to each questionnaire with 1 of the 10 choices of the possible failure rates. The EIN randomized distribution of questionnaires with the 10 failure rates inserted in the last question to members practicing within the 9 regions of the United States distinguished by the CDC. Each EIN member received only 1 potential acceptable failure rate to which they were asked to respond yes or no (e.g. 10%). The EIN survey also asked its members to provide the number of years that they had been in clinical practice. Elicitation of preferences. The approach used for elicitation of preferences in this study was closely related to economic studies of willingness-to-pay or willingness-to-accept payment performed using “contingent valuation” methodology [5]. We Acceptable Treatment Failure Rates • CID 2005:41 (15 December) • 1735 Table 1. Geographic distribution of Emerging Infections Network (EIN) members who responded to a questionnaire regarding acceptable treatment failure rates. Region No. of EIN respondents New England Mid Atlantic 33 61 East North-Central West North-Central South Atlantic 51 17 75 East South-Central West South-Central Mountain 15 39 25 Pacific US territories Canada 53 2 3 Total 374 used a “take it or leave it” approach, in which study participants are presented with only a single bid, which they can accept or reject. IDCs were asked the following question: Given the standard treatment scenario described above, do you feel that the treatment failure rate XX% listed below would be acceptable (i.e., the rate listed below is not too high; it is less than or equal to the percent of patients that you would expect to fail appropriate therapy)? The subjects were asked to answer “yes” or “no” to the above question, indicating that the failure rate (XX%) listed was either acceptable or not acceptable. Statistical analysis. For each of the 10 failure rates randomly distributed to the IDCs, the proportions of responders who found the number acceptable and who found it unacceptable were calculated. A logistic regression analysis evaluated the relationship between willingness to accept a specific failure rate and the failure rate offered to the subject in the questionnaire. Median and upper and lower quartile failure rates were estimated for the entire group of respondents. Univariable and multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify respondent characteristics that might influence willingness to accept failure. Statistical analyses were performed using Stata for Macintosh, version 8.0 (Stata), and Excel 2000 (Microsoft). All aspects of this study were approved by the University of Maryland Institutional Review Board (Baltimore). RESULTS Overall, 374 (54%) of 687 adult IDCs who were members of EIN responded to the survey. This response rate is similar to the rates from other EIN surveys [4, 6, 7]. Subjects were dis1736 • CID 2005:41 (15 December) • Perencevich et al. tributed evenly across the entire United States (table 1). In addition, 3 subjects were from Canada, and 2 were from a US territory. The mean length of time (SD) that the respondents had been in clinical practice was 15.9 8.6 years. There were at least 26 respondents for each category of therapeutic failure rates, with a mean of 37.4 respondents in each category (table 2). Overall, the proportion of IDCs who found a particular failure rate to be acceptable decreased in a nonlinear fashion as the listed failure rate increased. One hundred percent of IDCs found a failure rate of 0.01% for the clinical vignette to be acceptable, whereas 2 (5.1%) of 39 found a failure rate of 30% to be acceptable (table 2). In the univariable logistic regression model, with given failure rate as the predictor for the binary outcome “yes” (the failure rate was acceptable) or “no” (the failure rate was not acceptable), the odds that an IDC would find a given failure rate to be acceptable decreased by 0.81 for each 1% increase in a given failure rate (OR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.77–0.85; P ! .001). In other words, if the failure rate in the clinical vignette was increased from 1% to 2%, the odds that IDCs would accept this increase would decrease by a factor of 0.81; if the failure rate increased from 5% to 10%, the odds that this increase would be acceptable would decrease by a factor of 0.81 to the fifth power (0.815, or 0.35). A fitted logistic curve of the expected proportion of IDCs willing to accept a failure rate across a range of given potential failure rates is presented in figure 1. The projected median failure rate was 6.8%. Thus, presented with a failure rate of 6.8%, one-half of the study subjects would have been expected to agree that that failure rate was acceptable. Seventy-five percent of subjects would have found a failure rate of 1.6% to be acceptable, and 25% of subjects would have found a failure rate as high as 11.9% to be acceptable. A multivariable logistic regression model was created to adjust for potential confounding of acceptable failure rates by number of years in practice (a marker for IDC experience). No Table 2. Acceptable rates of treatment failure, according to 374 responding infectious diseases consultants (IDCs). Response, no. (%) of IDCs No. of IDCs who responded Reject Accept 0.01 0.1 1 26 44 40 0 4 9 26 (100) 40 (90.9) 31 (77.5) 2 3 5 34 37 41 10 14 20 24 (70.6) 23 (62.2) 21 (51.2) 10 15 20 36 46 31 29 42 26 7 (19.4) 4 (8.7) 5 (16.1) 30 39 37 2 (5.1) Proposed rate of treatment failure, % Figure 1. Relationship between failure rate given to physicians and the percentage of physicians willing to accept that failure rate. Diamonds represent 26–46 respondents. The line is a fitted logistic curve utilizing all of the data describing the expected percentage of physicians willing to accept each failure rate. change in the OR for acceptable failure rate was identified in the adjusted model, and the number of years in practice was not a predictor of acceptance of a particular failure rate (OR, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.998–1.06; P p .41) DISCUSSION The emergence of antibiotic resistance in bacterial pathogens is directly related to antibiotic use, with the inevitable selection of resistant bacterial pathogens [1]. Increasing rates of infections caused by antibiotic-resistant organisms have led to several types of antibiotic management programs designed to optimize prescribing in an effort to control the emergence of antimicrobial resistance [8–12]. These strategies include restricted antibiotic formularies in hospitals and targeted education to reduce the prescription of antibiotics for nonbacterial infectious conditions (i.e., upper respiratory infections). A large proportion of antibiotic prescriptions are considered to be inappropriate or unnecessary [13–16]. Given the emergence of vancomycin-resistant enterococci and vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus [17–19], antibiotic stewardship programs, including the CDC’s 12 Steps to Prevent Antimicrobial Resistance among Hospitalized Adults, often aim to limit excessive vancomycin use [20, 21]. In addition, the CDC’s Hospital Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee Guidelines for the Prevention and Control of Vancomycin Resistance advocates prudent use of vancomycin [22, 23]. Prolonged courses of antibiotic therapy may foster the development of resistance to not only the prescribed antibiotic, but also to multiple other classes of antibiotics. Some investigators have suggested that, for certain diseases, reduction in antibiotic treatment duration will decrease the emergence of antimicrobial resistance [1]. Therefore, in the hospital setting, shortening the excessive duration of appropriate vancomycin therapy may be optimal, particularly for infections caused by pathogens of relatively low virulence, such as coagulase-negative staphylococci. This current study determined an acceptable treatment failure rate for a representative case of CVC-associated bacteremia caused by coagulase-negative staphylococci on the basis of responses from a group of clinical IDCs. CVC-associated, coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia was chosen because it represented a common scenario treated with vancomycin by diverse groups of clinicians, such as surgeons, general internists, and subspecialists, including pulmonary critical care and IDCs. We chose the “take-it-or-leave it” methodology and not an open-ended question format for our study, because responding to open-ended questions requires more time from respondents and decreases study participation [24]. For this reason and others, the methodology we chose is thought to better approximate “real-life” decision-making [24]. In addition, elicitation of preferences using contingent valuation is not subject to framing effects and anchoring biases (i.e., sensitivity of subAcceptable Treatment Failure Rates • CID 2005:41 (15 December) • 1737 ject responses to opening bids, ranges of bids provided, and phrasing of questions) that can occur when open-ended questions are used [25]. This methodology is similar to economic contingent valuation, which was initially utilized to generate monetary values for such abstract quantities as wildlife preservation and water quality [5]. It has also been used to determine willingness to pay for diverse health products, including needlestick avoidance devices, in-vitro fertilization, autologous blood donation, and asthma therapies [26–30]. Using this methodology, we previously determined acceptable failure rates for standard therapy for diabetic osteomyelitis [4]. The examined case scenario (appendix 1, figure A1) involved treatment of a patient who developed coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia on day 3 after undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. The median acceptable failure rate for treatment of coagulase-negative staphylococcal, CVC-related bacteremia reported by IDCs in this analysis was 6.8%. In addition, this methodology was able to determine that 75% of respondents would have found a failure rate of 1.6% to be acceptable, and 25% of respondents would have found a failure rate of 11.9% to be acceptable. This additional calculation of acceptable ranges would not have been possible with the open-ended or multiple-choice questionnaire formats. Coagulase-negative staphylococci are the most frequently isolated pathogens in nosocomial and catheter-related bloodstream infections, and 180% of these pathogens are resistant to methicillin, necessitating administration of vancomycin [31, 32]. Fortunately, mortality associated with coagulase-negative staphylococcal, catheter-related bacteremia is quite low (∼0.7%) [31]. Importantly, the recently published guidelines for the management of catheter-related bloodstream infections from the IDSA, the American College of Critical Care Medicine, and the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America state that “there are no compelling data to support specific recommendations regarding the duration of therapy for devicerelated infections” [31, p. 1253]. These guidelines recommend a choice between removal of the catheter and treatment with systemic antibiotics for 5–7 days, or retention of the catheter and 10–14 days of systemic antibiotics for patients with CVCrelated, coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia. There have been no randomized trials comparing these treatments [31]. However, these guidelines do reference an observational study by Raad et al. [33] that compared treatment failure (defined as recurrent bacteremia within 12 weeks) in cases of CVCrelated, coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia among patients who had catheters removed and among those for whom the catheters were retained. Recurrent bacteremia occurred in 20% of patients with retained catheters, compared with 3% of those who had their catheters removed (P ! .05). If we interpret these failure rates using our survey data, we can estimate that 69% of the IDCs surveyed would have found the 1738 • CID 2005:41 (15 December) • Perencevich et al. 3% recurrent bacteremia failure rate reported in the catheter removal arm of the study to be acceptable. Apart from pediatric trials, to our knowledge, no randomized, clinical trials have specifically reported treatment outcomes for CVC-associated, coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia [34, 35]. Thus, our methodology will be helpful in the interpretation of future trials [36]. For example, in a hypothetical clinical trial, it is likely that failure rates with recurrent bacteremia will be lower for patients treated for 14 days than for those treated for 3 days. We suggest that acceptable failure rates need to be determined from physicians and patients before any recommendations for an optimal treatment duration are made. If the rate obtained from a study for 3 days of therapy is deemed to be acceptable, then 11 days of excess antibiotic treatment may be avoided. Thus, having an estimate of this acceptable rate allows a frame of reference when evaluating outcomes of clinical trials or retrospective cohort studies. In addition, interpretation of the results of trials that have used the methodology could prove useful to those who are developing clinical practice guidelines. Our recent survey, which measured the acceptable median failure rate for treating diabetic foot osteomyelitis, was incorporated into the recent IDSA guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of diabetic foot infections [4, 37]. A potential limitation of the methodology employed is that our questionnaire used only a single case scenario and a single definition of failure and was administered to only 1 subspecialty of physicians. For instance, a similar scenario that involved a patient who had undergone a recent prosthetic valve placement and developed methicillin-resistant S. aureus bacteremia would likely yield very different results. Thus, our measured acceptable failure rate cannot be used in assessing trials in other clinical conditions. However, the contingent valuation methodology permits derivation of considerable information from a single case and administration of the survey to a group of interest. The development of a series of surveys with alternative scenarios is feasible, given the existence of groups such as the IDSA EIN. The methodology could be used in the future to assess preferences in other important groups, such as general internists and patients, which would move us toward the goal of determining treatment preferences from a broader perspective, such as a societal one. Some issues not considered in this study are the acceptable rate of treatment failure from the patients’ perspectives and the impact of failure events on patients’ quality of life. No appropriate treatment strategy can be deployed without understanding these values. Some have advocated a shared decision-making model in antibiotic prescriptions that incorporates individual physician and patient understanding and preferences [38, 39]. Understanding acceptable failure rates obtained from a large group of physicians could help to improve communi- cation with patients and facilitate informed decision-making from the patient’s perspective, because benchmarks allow clinicians to provide greater clarity to patients on what clinicians regard as acceptable. In addition, our study captured considerable between-physician variability, with an order of magnitude difference in acceptable failure rates between the 25th and 75th percentiles. This finding has 2 important implications: (1) there is no absolute in terms of what constitutes acceptable failure rates among IDCs, and (2) communication of this difference to physicians could inform those physicians whose preferences fall far outside the median acceptable failure rate to consider reviewing their treatment practices, relative to standard-of-care practices. The true benefit of the methodology is that it provides plausible estimates of acceptable treatment failure rates among expert physicians. These acceptable failure rates can be used to assess interventions to reduce excess antibiotic treatment duration in the specific scenario of CVC-associated, coagulasenegative staphylococcal bacteremia. The potential reduction of excess treatment duration is an important step towards the ultimate goal of reducing exposure to antibiotics and thus slowing the emergence of antibiotic-resistant organisms. Acknowledgments Financial support. VA Health Services Research and Development Service Research Career Development Award (RCD-02026-1 to E.N.P.) and National Institutes of Health (K23 AI01752-01A1 to A.D.H.), and the CDC (cooperative agreement U50/CCU112346). The contents of this article are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the CDC. Potential conflicts of interest. All authors: no conflicts. Acceptable Treatment Failure Rates • CID 2005:41 (15 December) • 1739 APPENDIX Figure A1. Questionnaire distributed to the Infectious Diseases Society of America Emerging Infections Network References 1. Levy SB. Confronting multidrug resistance: a role for each of us. JAMA 1993; 269:1840–2. 2. Fiscella K, Franks P, Zwanziger J, Mooney C, Sorbero M, Williams GC. Risk aversion and costs: a comparison of family physicians and general internists. J Fam Pract 2000; 49:12–7. 3. Pearson SD, Goldman L, Orav EJ, et al. 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