P-1185. Healthcare Resource Utilization (HCRU) of Critical Care Patients by Rank of Initiation from the Study of Prescribing patterns and Effectiveness of Ceftolozane/Tazobactam: Real-world Analysis (SPECTRA)
Emre Yucel, Alex Soriano, Florian Thalhammer, Stefan Kluge, Pierluigi Viale, Mike Allen, Brune Akrich, Jessica Levy, Huina Yang, Sundeep Kaul

TL;DR
This study analyzed healthcare resource use in critical care patients based on when they started antibiotic treatment, finding differences in readmissions and hospital stays.
Contribution
The study provides real-world insights into how the timing of antibiotic initiation affects healthcare resource utilization in critical care patients.
Findings
30-day all-cause readmission rates varied from 1.4% to 4.7% across ranks of antibiotic initiation.
Median hospital length of stay post-antibiotic initiation ranged from 4.0 to 12.0 days.
21.5% of patients remained hospitalized 30 days after starting antibiotics, mostly in the first four ranks.
Abstract
A sub-analysis of SPECTRA (Study of Prescribing patterns and Effectiveness of Ceftolozane/Tazobactam Real-world Analysis) aimed to analyze healthcare resource utilization among 298 critical care patients stratified by the rank of chemotherapy or targeted therapy (C/T) initiation, focusing on 30-day all-cause readmissions, infection-related readmissions, prolonged hospital stays, and median length of hospital stays post-C/T initiation (n=298). SPECTRA was a multicenter, observational study in patients (≥18 years of age) treated with ≥48 h of C/T in a hospital setting. For HCRU, data were categorized by the rank of C/T initiation: First Rank (N=74), Second Rank (N=70), Third Rank (N=57), Fourth Rank (N=43), Fifth Rank (N=26), and Sixth or more Rank (N=28). The study examined 30-day all-cause readmission rates, 30-day infection-related readmission rates, the number of patients remaining…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSepsis Diagnosis and Treatment · Nosocomial Infections in ICU · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections
