Clinical Governance, Metro North Hospital and Health Service, Level 14 Block 7, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Cnr Butterfield St and Bowen Bridge Road, Herston, QLD 4029, Australia.
School of Pharmacy, The University of Queensland, UQ Dutton Park, Level 4, 20 Cornwall Street, Woolloongabba, QLD 4102, Australia.
Int J Qual Health Care. 2024 Oct 18;36(4). doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzae096.
Iron deficiency is the leading cause of anaemia worldwide and is increasingly treated with intravenous (IV) iron therapy. Staining from IV iron therapy is a rare but significant and preventable adverse event. To mitigate patient harm, a health-service-wide quality improvement project was implemented. This study aimed to determine the real-world impact of a quality improvement project on IV iron staining incidents and preventability.
A retrospective chart audit was undertaken for all IV iron staining episodes reported in a directorate-wide clinical incident reporting database (RiskMan) between 2016 and 2022. Incidence rates of IV iron staining, preventability, and stain severity were compared pre- and post-implementation of a standardized IV iron procedure.
Over 7 years, 103 IV iron stains were identified, resulting in a staining rate of 0.31 stains per 100 infusions (pre 0.27% and post 0.34%, P = .25). Implementation of the standardized IV iron procedure resulted in improvements in pharmacist review of the medication order (61.8% versus 89.7%, P < .01), use of the statewide IV iron infusion consent form (27.3% versus 76.9%, P < .01), and appropriate cannula site (14.3% versus 52.5%, P < .01). Smaller stain sizes were associated with cessation of the infusion at identification of extravasation (312 cm2 versus 35 cm2) (P = .04). Preventability was assigned to 86% of stains.
The incidence rate of IV iron staining in a real-world clinical setting is 0.31%. There was increased compliance with several best practice principles and 86% of stains were preventable. Early identification and intervention of potential staining incidents results in smaller iron stains for patients. Quality improvement tools developed for this project can contribute to patient outcomes internationally.
缺铁是全球范围内贫血的主要原因,并且越来越多地采用静脉(IV)铁治疗。IV 铁治疗后的染色是一种罕见但严重且可预防的不良事件。为了减轻患者的伤害,实施了一项全卫生服务质量改进项目。本研究旨在确定质量改进项目对 IV 铁染色事件及其可预防性的实际影响。
对 2016 年至 2022 年期间在一个全部门临床事件报告数据库(RiskMan)中报告的所有 IV 铁染色事件进行回顾性图表审查。比较了实施标准化 IV 铁程序前后 IV 铁染色的发生率、可预防性和染色严重程度。
在 7 年期间,共发现 103 例 IV 铁染色,导致每 100 次输注染色率为 0.31 例(前为 0.27%,后为 0.34%,P=0.25)。实施标准化 IV 铁程序后,药剂师对药物医嘱的审查有所改善(61.8%对 89.7%,P<0.01),使用全州 IV 铁输注同意表(27.3%对 76.9%,P<0.01)和适当的套管部位(14.3%对 52.5%,P<0.01)。在识别外渗时停止输注与较小的染色面积相关(312cm2对 35cm2)(P=0.04)。86%的染色被认为是可预防的。
在真实临床环境中,IV 铁染色的发生率为 0.31%。几项最佳实践原则的遵守情况有所提高,86%的染色是可预防的。对潜在染色事件的早期识别和干预可使患者的铁染色面积更小。为该项目开发的质量改进工具可以为国际患者的结果做出贡献。