ACORN (A Clinically-Oriented Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network) II: protocol for case based antimicrobial resistance surveillance
Date
2023
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wellcome Open Research
Abstract
Background: Antimicrobial resistance surveillance is essential for
empiric antibiotic prescribing, infection prevention and control
policies and to drive novel antibiotic discoveries. However, most existing
surveillance systems are isolate-based without supporting patient-based clinical data and not widely implemented, especially in low- and
middle-income countries (LMICs).
Methods: A Clinically-Oriented Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance
Network (ACORN) II is a large-scale multicenter protocol which builds
on the WHO Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance
System to estimate syndromic and pathogen outcomes along with
associated health and economic costs. ACORN-healthcare associated
infection (ACORN-HAI) is an extension study which focuses on
healthcare-associated bloodstream infections and ventilator-associated pneumonia. Our main aim is to implement an efficient
clinically-oriented antimicrobial resistance surveillance system, which
can be incorporated as part of routine workflow in hospitals in LMICs.
These surveillance systems include hospitalised patients of any age
with clinically compatible acute community-acquired or healthcare-associated bacterial infection syndromes, and who were prescribed
parenteral antibiotics. Diagnostic stewardship activities will be
implemented to optimise microbiology culture specimen collection
practices. Basic patient characteristics, clinician diagnosis, empiric
treatment, infection severity and risk factors for HAI are recorded on
enrolment and during the 28-day follow-up. An R Shiny application can be
used offline and online for merging clinical and microbiology data,
and generating collated reports to inform local antibiotic stewardship
and infection control policies.
Discussion: ACORN II is a comprehensive antimicrobial resistance
surveillance activity, which advocates pragmatic implementation and
prioritises improving local diagnostic and antibiotic prescribing
practices through patient-centred data collection. These data can be
rapidly communicated to local physicians and infection prevention
and control teams. The relative ease of data collection promotes
sustainability and maximises participation and scalability. With
As an example, ACORN II has the capacity to
accommodate extensions to investigate further specific questions of
interest.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Antimicrobial resistance, surveillance, antibiotic stewardship