# Dissemination of a facilitation strategy to de-implement unnecessary post-operative antibiotics at children's hospitals: The Optimizing Perioperative Antibiotic in Children (OPerAtiC) trial 2.0

**Authors:** Emmanuel K. Tetteh, Harry Obeng, Andrew Atkinson, Sara Malone, Matt Sattler, Tyler Walsh, Lauren Walsh, Jacqueline M. Saito, Shawn J. Rangel, Jason G. Newland, Virginia R. McKay

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13012-025-01460-5 · Implementation Science : IS · 2025-11-10

## TL;DR

This study evaluates a strategy to reduce unnecessary post-operative antibiotics in children's hospitals, aiming to curb antibiotic resistance and infections.

## Contribution

The study expands a facilitation strategy for antimicrobial stewardship across diverse hospitals, using a scalable model.

## Key findings

- Facilitation training improved implementation of surgical prophylaxis guidelines in prior trials.
- The study will evaluate trends in antibiotic use and infections across 20 hospitals using NSQIP-P data.
- A quasi-experimental design will assess implementation outcomes every six months.

## Abstract

Excessive postoperative antibiotic use in pediatric surgical patients contributes to antibiotic resistance and increases the risk of Clostridioides difficile infection. Despite established guidelines recommending limited postoperative antibiotic duration, many hospitals struggle with de-implementation. This study aims to disseminate and evaluate the impact of a combined strategy to reduce unnecessary postoperative antibiotic use which combines enhanced antimicrobial stewardship program facilitation, defined as a set of actions to enable implementation, combined with order set review and modification. This multi-center study builds on an initial stepped wedge cluster randomized trial involving nine children’s hospitals, where facilitation training improved implementation of surgical prophylaxis guidelines and improved post-operative antibiotic use.

The current study expands the strategy to a diverse set of hospitals caring for children in the US. Antimicrobial stewardship teams and surgeons from any hospital providing pediatric surgical care will be eligible to participate in facilitation training either as a single session webinar or as asynchronous modules. Based on the integrated Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (iPARiHS), the facilitation training includes didactic presentations and activities that focus on current evidence related to surgical prophylaxis, evaluation of context, interpersonal relationships, and structured processes to foster change. We will use a quasi-experimental time-series design collecting data from clinicians using a structured interview guide every six months on implementation of prophylaxis guideline congruent order sets as the primary implementation outcome. We will also evaluate trends in at least 20 hospitals collecting quality improvement data through the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program-Pediatrics (NSQIP-P) on postoperative antibiotic use, surgical site infections, and Clostridioides difficile infections from 2022–2027.

By scaling up this intervention, the study aims to provide a robust evaluation of its effectiveness across diverse hospital settings. If successful, this approach could inform future antimicrobial stewardship efforts in pediatric and adult surgical populations, offering a scalable model for reducing inappropriate antibiotic use while maintaining patient safety.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13012-025-01460-5.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Clostridioides difficile infection (MESH:D003015), infections (MESH:D007239)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

3 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12599022/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12599022