# P-890. Exit Strategy: A Retrospective Analysis of Parenteral Antibiotic Stewardship at Discharge

**Authors:** Karan Raja, Rebecca Lee, Soo Kang, Mitesh Patel, Mona Philips

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.1098 · Open Forum Infectious Diseases · 2026-01-11

## TL;DR

This study examines how antibiotics prescribed at hospital discharge are often inappropriate and suggests integrating stewardship programs to improve their use.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific gaps in discharge antibiotic stewardship and proposes integrating ASPs into discharge planning.

## Key findings

- 52.8% of antibiotic regimens were appropriate, while 38.8% were inappropriate.
- Common issues included poor antibiotic selection, duration, and transition to oral antibiotics.
- Average length of hospital stay was 10.7 days.

## Abstract

Inpatient antibiotic stewardship programs (ASP) are associated with improved infection cure rates, as well as reduced risk of adverse drug events and antibiotic resistance development. However, there is often limited ASP presence at the discharge setting. Data has shown over 70% of parenteral antibiotic prescriptions at hospital discharge are excessively broad spectrum or have prolonged durations. Additionally, these patients’ discharge planning process is complex, prolonging length of stay (LOS). The objective of this gap analysis is to evaluate the inpatient LOS and antibiotic appropriateness of parenteral antibiotic therapy prescribed at discharge from an urban, non-teaching, community medical center.

This IRB-approved retrospective cohort study evaluated adult patients discharged on parenteral antibiotics between January and March 2024. The primary outcome is LOS in days from hospital admission to discharge. We also evaluated antibiotic appropriateness, antibiotic days of therapy, vascular access devices, 30-day readmission rates, and discharge disposition. Antibiotic appropriateness was assessed using the validated National Antibiotic Prescribing Survey (NAPS) which stratifies regimens as appropriate (optimal or adequate), inappropriate (suboptimal or inadequate), or not assessable based on local treatment guidelines, literature references, and patient-specific factors. Inappropriate antibiotic regimens were further evaluated to identify specific opportunities for ASP intervention. Data were evaluated using descriptive statistics, including measures of central tendency and dispersion.

A total of 168 patients met inclusion criteria. The average LOS was 10.7±7.7 days. The proportion of appropriate and inappropriate antibiotic regimens were 52.8% and 38.8%, respectively. The most frequently identified opportunities for intervention included improving antibiotic selection, duration, and transition to oral antibiotics.

This gap analysis illustrates discharge parenteral antibiotic stewardship metrics, including associated inpatient LOS and antibiotic appropriateness. Based on these findings, we aim to integrate ASPs in discharge planning to close these gaps and improve antibiotic utilization.

All Authors: No reported disclosures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12791930