Sharma Sunita, Martijn Bos J, Tarrell Robert F, Simon Gyorgy J, Morlan Bruce W, Ackerman Michael J, Caraballo Pedro J
Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN, 55905, USA.
Department of Cardiovascular Diseases, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
J Med Syst. 2017 Sep 2;41(10):161. doi: 10.1007/s10916-017-0803-7.
Commonly used drugs in hospital setting can cause QT prolongation and trigger life-threatening arrhythmias. We evaluate changes in prescribing behavior after the implementation of a clinical decision support system to prevent the use of QT prolonging medications in the hospital setting. We conducted a quasi-experimental study, before and after the implementation of a clinical decision support system integrated in the electronic medical record (QT-alert system). This system detects patients at risk of significant QT prolongation (QTc>500ms) and alerts providers ordering QT prolonging drugs. We reviewed the electronic health record to assess the provider's responses which were classified as "action taken" (QT drug avoided, QT drug changed, other QT drug(s) avoided, ECG monitoring, electrolytes monitoring, QT issue acknowledged, other actions) or "no action taken". Approximately, 15.5% (95/612) of the alerts were followed by a provider's action in the pre-intervention phase compared with 21% (228/1085) in the post-intervention phase (p=0.006). The most common type of actions taken during pre-intervention phase compared to post-intervention phase were ECG monitoring (8% vs. 13%, p=0.002) and QT issue acknowledgment (2.1% vs. 4.1%, p=0.03). Notably, there was no significant difference for other actions including QT drug avoided (p=0.8), QT drug changed (p=0.06) and other QT drug(s) avoided (p=0.3). Our study demonstrated that the QT alert system prompted a higher proportion of providers to take action on patients at risk of complications. However, the overall impact was modest underscoring the need for educating providers and optimizing clinical decision support to further reduce drug-induced QT prolongation.
医院常用药物可导致QT间期延长并引发危及生命的心律失常。我们评估了临床决策支持系统实施后处方行为的变化,以防止在医院环境中使用可延长QT间期的药物。我们进行了一项准实验研究,在集成于电子病历的临床决策支持系统(QT警报系统)实施前后进行。该系统可检测有显著QT间期延长风险(QTc>500ms)的患者,并提醒开具可延长QT间期药物的医护人员。我们查阅电子健康记录以评估医护人员的反应,这些反应被分类为“采取行动”(避免使用QT药物、更换QT药物、避免使用其他QT药物、进行心电图监测、监测电解质、确认QT问题、采取其他行动)或“未采取行动”。在干预前阶段,约15.5%(95/612)的警报之后医护人员采取了行动,而在干预后阶段这一比例为21%(228/1085)(p=0.006)。与干预后阶段相比,干预前阶段采取的最常见行动类型是心电图监测(8%对13%,p=0.002)和确认QT问题(2.1%对4.1%,p=0.03)。值得注意的是,包括避免使用QT药物(p=0.8)、更换QT药物(p=0.06)和避免使用其他QT药物(p=0.3)在内的其他行动没有显著差异。我们的研究表明,QT警报系统促使更高比例的医护人员对有并发症风险的患者采取行动。然而,总体影响不大,这突出表明需要对医护人员进行教育并优化临床决策支持,以进一步减少药物引起的QT间期延长。