Department of Biomedical Informatics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2010 Nov;56(5):832-41. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2010.05.024. Epub 2010 Aug 14.
Frequently, prescribers fail to account for changing kidney function when prescribing medications. We evaluated the use of a computerized provider order entry intervention to improve medication management during acute kidney injury.
Quality improvement report with time series analyses.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: 1,598 adult inpatients with a minimum 0.5-mg/dL increase in serum creatinine level over 48 hours after an order for at least one of 122 nephrotoxic or renally cleared medications.
Passive noninteractive warnings about increasing serum creatinine level appeared within the computerized provider order entry interface and on printed rounding reports. For contraindicated or high-toxicity medications that should be avoided or adjusted, an interruptive alert within the system asked providers to modify or discontinue the targeted orders, mark the current dosing as correct and to remain unchanged, or defer the alert to reappear in the next session.
OUTCOMES & MEASUREMENTS: Intervention effect on drug modification or discontinuation, time to modification or discontinuation, and provider interactions with alerts.
The modification or discontinuation rate per 100 events for medications included in the interruptive alert within 24 hours of increasing creatinine level improved from 35.2 preintervention to 52.6 postintervention (P < 0.001); orders were modified or discontinued more quickly (P < 0.001). During the postintervention period, providers initially deferred 78.1% of interruptive alerts, although 54% of these eventually were modified or discontinued before patient death, discharge, or transfer. The response to passive alerts about medications requiring review did not significantly change compared with baseline.
Single tertiary-care academic medical center; provider actions were not independently adjudicated for appropriateness.
A computerized provider order entry-based alerting system to support medication management after acute kidney injury significantly increased the rate and timeliness of modification or discontinuation of targeted medications.
临床医生在开具药物处方时,常常未能考虑到肾功能的变化。我们评估了一种计算机化医嘱输入干预措施在改善急性肾损伤期间药物管理的效果。
质量改进报告,时间序列分析。
1598 名成年住院患者,在至少一种肾毒性或经肾脏清除的药物医嘱后 48 小时内血清肌酐水平升高至少 0.5mg/dL。
在计算机化医嘱输入界面和打印的查房报告上出现关于血清肌酐水平升高的被动非交互式警告。对于应避免或调整的禁忌或高毒性药物,系统内的中断式警告要求临床医生修改或停止目标医嘱,将当前剂量标记为正确且不变,或推迟该警告在下一次查房时再次出现。
干预对药物修改或停药的影响,修改或停药的时间,以及临床医生与警告的交互。
在肌酐升高后 24 小时内,包含在中断式警告中的药物,每 100 例事件中的修改或停药率从干预前的 35.2%提高到干预后的 52.6%(P<0.001);医嘱修改或停药更快(P<0.001)。在干预后期间,临床医生最初推迟了 78.1%的中断式警告,但其中 54%最终在患者死亡、出院或转科前进行了修改或停药。与基线相比,对需要审查的药物的被动警告的反应没有显著变化。
单一的三级学术医疗中心;临床医生的行动没有独立审查其是否合适。
一种基于计算机化医嘱输入的警报系统,用于支持急性肾损伤后的药物管理,显著提高了目标药物修改或停药的速度和及时性。