Abstract
Objective:
To evaluate the economic benefit associated with the early conversion of therapy from intravenous ceftriaxone to the comparable oral third-generation cephalosporin, cefpodoxime proxetil.
Design:
Open-label, unblind, nonrandomized clinical trial.
Setting:
A 360-bed Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
Patients:
Forty patients who began receiving intravenous ceftriaxone for either a community-acquired pneumonia or a complicated urinary tract infection.
Intervention:
Twenty patients were selected, based on clinical assessment, to be converted from intravenous ceftriaxone to oral cefpodoxime proxetil. Twenty other comparable patients, who would have been appropriate for step-down therapy, did not receive pharmacy intervention and were used as a control group.
Measurements:
Both groups were assessed and compared for length of ceftriaxone therapy, length of oral follow-up therapy (if any), length of hospitalization, results of culture and sensitivity testing, treatment success and readmissions, and cost of respective therapeutic regimens.
Results:
In the cefpodoxime study group, the average time receiving intravenous and oral antibiotics was 9.1 days at a total cost of $3040.26 for the 20 patients. In the control group, the average time receiving intravenous and oral antibiotics was 11.9 days at a total cost of $3961.26. A savings of $46.05 per patient was achieved. Patients receiving step-down therapy averaged 1 fewer day of hospitalization.
Conclusions:
Pharmacist intervention and cefpodoxime step-down therapy were associated with decreased overall antibiotic costs in our intravenous-to-oral program.
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