RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) may be helpful in tailoring antimicrobial treatment, and expert interpretation of the results may make it more clinically useful. METHODS: This study aimed to assess retrospectively the first-year impact (July 2021 to June 2022) of a newly established expert clinical pharmacological advice (ECPA) programme based on TDM results in tailoring therapy with 18 antimicrobials hospital-wide in a tertiary university hospital. All patients having ≥1 ECPA were grouped in five cohorts [haematology, intensive care unit (ICU), paediatrics, medical wards and surgical wards]. Four indicators of performance were identified: total ECPAs; total ECPAs recommending dosing adjustments/total ECPAs both at first and at subsequent assessments; and turnaround time (TAT) of ECPAs, defined as optimal (<12 h), quasi-optimal (12-24 h), acceptable (24-48 h) or suboptimal (>48 h). RESULTS: A total of 8484 ECPAs were provided for tailoring treatment in 2961 patients, mostly admitted in the ICU (34.1%) and medical wards (32.0%). The proportion of ECPAs recommending dosing adjustments was >40% at first assessment (40.9% haematology; 62.9% ICU; 53.9% paediatrics; 59.1% medical wards; and 59.7% surgical wards), and decreased consistently at subsequent TDM assessments (20.7% haematology; 40.6% ICU; 37.4% paediatrics; 32.9% medical wards; and 29.2% surgical wards). The overall median TAT of the ECPAs was optimal (8.11 h). CONCLUSION: The TDM-guided ECPA programme was successful in tailoring treatment with a wide panel of antimicrobials hospital-wide. Expert interpretation by medical clinical pharmacologists, short TATs, and strict interaction with infectious diseases consultants and clinicians were crucial in achieving this.