Impact of Delayed Time to Antibiotics in Medical and Surgical Necrotizing Enterocolitis

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Abstract

This study investigated whether delayed receipt of antibiotics in infants with necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is associated with disease severity. In this retrospective, single-center cohort study of infants diagnosed with NEC over 4 years, we compared the timing of antibiotic administration in infants (time order placed to time of receipt) in medical and surgical NEC. Cases were independently reviewed, then various clinical factors were compared. Of 46 suspected cases, 25 were confirmed by a panel of radiologists with good interrater reliability (ICC 0.657; p < 0.001). Delays in antibiotic receipt were 1.7× greater in surgical than medical NEC cases (p = 0.049). Every hour after order entry increased the adjusted odds of surgical NEC by 2.4 (1.08–5.23; p = 0.032). Delayed antibiotic receipt was more common in infants with surgical than medical NEC. Larger studies will be needed to investigate if optimizing antibiotic expediency could improve intestinal outcomes.

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Chetta, K. E., Vincent, K. G., Fanning, B., Klumb, A. B., Chetta, J. A., Rohrer, A. M., … Hill, J. G. (2023). Impact of Delayed Time to Antibiotics in Medical and Surgical Necrotizing Enterocolitis. Children, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010160

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