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Erschienen in: Archives of Dermatological Research 5/2024

01.07.2024 | Original Paper

Antibiotic adherence in dermatologic surgery: a Multicenter prospective cohort study

verfasst von: Surya A. Veerabagu, Leora Aizman, Brian Cheng, Michael P Lee, John S. Barbieri, Nicholas Golda, Alexis E. Carrington, Allison Weinkle Mitevski, Peter Bittar, David R. Carr, Daniel B. Eisen, Ally-Khan Somani, Christopher J. Miller, Joseph F. Sobanko, Thuzar M. Shin, H. William Higgins II, Cerrene N. Giordano, Jeremy R. Etzkorn

Erschienen in: Archives of Dermatological Research | Ausgabe 5/2024

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Abstract

Understanding patient non-adherence to prescribed antibiotics can inform clinical practices, patient counseling, and antibiotic efficacy study design in dermatology. The primary objective was to determine the rate of and reasons for antibiotic non-adherence in the dermatologic surgery setting. The secondary objective was to test the applicability of previously studied survey questions for antibiotic non-adherence screening in the dermatologic surgery setting. Five academic outpatient dermatologic surgery centers across the United States conducted one multicenter prospective cohort study. Dermatologic surgery patients ≥ 18 years of age who were prescribed an antibiotic were included as part of this study. 15.2% (42/276) of patients did not adhere to their antibiotic regimen after dermatologic surgery. Most common reasons for incomplete antibiotic courses included forgotten antibiotics (42.9%,18/42) and side effects (28.6%, 12/42). Previously evaluated questions to identify and predict non-adherence had modest performance in the dermatologic surgery setting (Area under the curve of 0.669 [95% CI (0.583–0.754)]). Antibiotic non-adherence after skin surgery is prevalent and commonly due to reasons that physicians can address with patients.
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Metadaten
Titel
Antibiotic adherence in dermatologic surgery: a Multicenter prospective cohort study
verfasst von
Surya A. Veerabagu
Leora Aizman
Brian Cheng
Michael P Lee
John S. Barbieri
Nicholas Golda
Alexis E. Carrington
Allison Weinkle Mitevski
Peter Bittar
David R. Carr
Daniel B. Eisen
Ally-Khan Somani
Christopher J. Miller
Joseph F. Sobanko
Thuzar M. Shin
H. William Higgins II
Cerrene N. Giordano
Jeremy R. Etzkorn
Publikationsdatum
01.07.2024
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Archives of Dermatological Research / Ausgabe 5/2024
Print ISSN: 0340-3696
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-069X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00403-024-02912-6

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