Karande Indrajit S, Goff Zoy, Kewley Jacqueline, Mehta Shailender, Snelling Thomas
Princess Margaret Hospital for Children (ISK, ZG, JK, TS), Perth, Australia, Fiona Stanley Hospital (SM), Perth, Australia, Telethon Kids Institute (SM), Perth, Australia, University of Notre Dame (SM), Fremantle, Australia, Wesfarmers Centre of Vaccines and Infectious Diseases (TS), Telethon Kids Institute, City, Country, and Menzies School of Health Research and Charles Darwin University (TS), Darwin, Australia.
J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther. 2017 Sep-Oct;22(5):364-368. doi: 10.5863/1551-6776-22.5.364.
Antimicrobial doses in children are often prescribed by using an individually calculated dose per weight (e.g., mg/kg) or based on body surface area. Dosing errors are the most commonly reported medication errors in children. A "dose-banding" strategy is frequently used for some over-the-counter drugs to prevent dosing errors. It could also lead to efficiencies by enabling batch preparation of intravenous (IV) medications in hospitals.
To evaluate whether use of dose-banding for IV piperacillin-tazobactam results in acceptable dose variation from standard practice of individualized prescription of 100 mg/kg in children.
We conducted a historically controlled intervention study comparing prescriptions of IV piperacillin-tazobactam before vs. after introduction of dose-banding prescribing guidance for surgical inpatients weighing >5 kg and <16 years of age at the tertiary referral pediatric hospital in Western Australia.
Dose-banding of IV piperacillin-tazobactam (with a maximum of 15% departure from the recommended milligram-per-weight dose of 100 mg/kg) resulted in similar overall variation of prescribed dose in comparison to individualized milligram-per-weight (non-dose-banded) prescribing. There was a trend toward fewer prescriptions with large variance (>30% variation from the 100-mg/kg dose) in the dose-banded compared to the non-dose-banded group (1/140 vs. 5/105; p = 0.09).
Our study showed dose-banding of IV piperacillin-tazobactam resulted in acceptable variation when compared to individualized milligram-per-weight dosing in children. Prospectively designed controlled trials are warranted to determine whether dose-banding could reduce medication errors and optimize use of hospital resources. Implications for future practice could include faster batch preparation, shorter checking and dispensing time, and reduction in drug wastage.
儿童抗菌药物剂量通常根据个体计算的每体重剂量(例如毫克/千克)或体表面积来开具。剂量错误是儿童中最常报告的用药错误。“剂量分组”策略常用于一些非处方药以防止剂量错误。它还可以通过在医院实现静脉注射(IV)药物的批量制备来提高效率。
评估静脉注射哌拉西林-他唑巴坦采用剂量分组是否会导致与儿童100毫克/千克个体化处方的标准做法相比出现可接受的剂量差异。
我们进行了一项历史对照干预研究,比较了西澳大利亚州三级转诊儿科医院中体重>5千克且<16岁的外科住院患者在引入剂量分组处方指南前后静脉注射哌拉西林-他唑巴坦的处方情况。
静脉注射哌拉西林-他唑巴坦的剂量分组(与推荐的每体重毫克剂量100毫克/千克的最大偏差为15%)与个体化每体重毫克(非剂量分组)处方相比,导致规定剂量的总体差异相似。与非剂量分组组相比,剂量分组组中差异较大(与100毫克/千克剂量的差异>30%)的处方数量有减少的趋势(1/140对5/105;p = 0.09)。
我们的研究表明静脉注射哌拉西林-他唑巴坦的剂量分组与儿童个体化每体重毫克给药相比导致了可接受的差异。有必要进行前瞻性设计的对照试验以确定剂量分组是否可以减少用药错误并优化医院资源的使用。对未来实践的影响可能包括更快的批量制备、更短的核对和配药时间以及减少药物浪费。