Sustained improvement in vancomycin dosing and monitoring post-implementation of guidelines: Results of a three-year follow-up after a multifaceted intervention in an Australian teaching hospital

Date

2018

Authors

Phillips, C.J.
McKinnon, R.A.
Woodman, R.J.
Gordon, D.L.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy, 2018; 24(3):103-109

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

Introduction: Despite vancomycin being in use for over half-a-century, it is still not dosed or monitored appropriately in many centers around the world. The objective of this study was to determine the effectiveness of a multifaceted intervention to implement a vancomycin dosing and monitoring guideline across multiple medical and surgical units over time. Methods: This was an observational before-and-after interventional cohort study. The pre-intervention period was August to December 2010-2011 and the post-intervention period was September to November 2012-2014. The implementation strategy comprised: face-to-face education, online continuing medical education, dissemination of pocket guideline and email reminder. Outcome measures included: appropriate prescribing of loading and maintenance doses, therapeutic drug monitoring, time to attain target range and nephrotoxicity. Results: Post-implementation prescribing of loading doses increased (10.4%-43.6%, P= < 0.001), guideline adherent first maintenance dose (44%-68.4% P = 0.04), correct dose adjustment from (53.1%-72.2%, P = 0.009). Beneficial effects pre and post-implementation were observed for adherent timing of initial concentration (43.2%-51.9%, P = 0.01), concentrations in target range (32.6%-44.1%, P = 0.001), time to target range (median 6-4 days, P= < 0.001), potentially nephrotoxic concentrations (30.7%-20.9%, P= < 0.001) and nephrotoxicity (10.4%-6.8%, P= < 0.001). Conclusions: A multifaceted intervention to implement a vancomycin dosing and monitoring guideline significantly improved prescribing, monitoring, pharmacokinetic and safety outcomes for patients treated with vancomycin over an extended period. However, increased guideline adoption by clinicians is required to maximize and prolong the utility of this important agent.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Data source: Supplementary data, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jiac.2017.09.010 Link to a related website: https://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/39104/1/Phillips_Sustained_AM2018.pdf, Open Access via Unpaywall

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2017 Japanese Society of Chemotherapy and The Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record