Clinical standards for antimicrobial stewardship in TB care.
T T Brehm, O W Akkerman, G Sotgiu, S Tiberi, K-C Chang, K Dheda, R Duarte, D Vambe, et al. (60 authors)
Open Access CRIS of the University of Bern · 2025-12
Abstract
Background While antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) is essential for combating antimicrobial resistance (AMR), TB-specific AMS strategies remain poorly defined.Methods An international panel of 62 experts participated in a Delphi process. Using a 5-point Likert scale (5 = strong agreement; 1 = strong disagreement), participants evaluated 10 draft clinical standards developed by a core coordination team. A standard was adopted if ≥90% of respondents rated it three or higher, according to a predefined consensus threshold.Results All 10 standards reached the consensus threshold and were adopted: Standard 1, integration of TB into national AMR action plans; Standard 2, implementation of TB surveillance systems; Standard 3, education of health care providers, individuals affected by TB, and the public; Standard 4, integration of TB into AMS activities; Standard 5, establishment of expert consultation services; Standard 6, targeted testing and preventive treatment for individuals at risk for TB; Standard 7, access to timely and comprehensive drug susceptibility testing; Standard 8, prioritisation of efficacy, safety, and resistance prevention in TB treatment regimens; Standard 9, clinical and microbiological monitoring of treatment response; and Standard 10, assessment of adherence, drug exposure, and resistance in treatment failure.Conclusion These clinical standards aim to support clinicians, programme managers, and public health authorities in implementing effective, TB-specific AMS strategies.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Delphi method
- Antimicrobial stewardship
- International standard
- Tuberculosis
- Public health
- Likert scale
- Standard of care
- Health care
- Standard operating procedure
- Environmental health
- Stewardship (theology)
- Antibiotic resistance
- Family medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Infection control