Weekend births linked to longer antibiotic exposure in very low birth weight infants with suspected sepsis
This retrospective cohort study investigated the duration of empirical antibiotic exposure in very low birth weight infants with suspected early-onset sepsis and negative blood cultures. The analysis focused on the median time from birth to antibiotic discontinuation orders for ampicillin and gentamicin within a level IIIC neonatal intensive care unit setting.
The authors observed that initiation of antibiotics during weekends was associated with prolonged antibiotic exposure compared to other days. Additionally, antibiotic discontinuation occurred progressively earlier over the study period. The median time from birth to discontinuation was roughly 45 hours for both ampicillin and gentamicin, or 42 hours when considering blood culture incubation time.
The study authors noted that data on actual treatment duration and associated factors remain limited. They highlighted that being born on weekends is associated with prolonged antibiotic exposure, though causality cannot be definitively established. These limitations suggest that the results should be interpreted with caution regarding broader clinical application.