Conversion of Intravenous Ranitidine to Oral Therapy
1991; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 25; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1177/106002809102500307
ISSN1042-9611
Autores Tópico(s)Pharmaceutical Practices and Patient Outcomes
ResumoA two-phase drug program concentrating on inappropriate use of intravenous ranitidine is described at a 612-bed university teaching hospital. Phase 1 of the study was a retrospective audit of 50 randomly selected adult patients receiving iv ranitidine. The chart was reviewed for indications for therapy, rationale for iv ranitidine, median length of iv therapy, and appropriateness of iv use. Phase 2 consisted of concurrent monitoring of iv ranitidine soley to assess the appropriateness of the iv dosage form at our hospital. Staff pharmacists reviewed the patient's medication profile from the central pharmacy to determine if the patient had standing orders for any oral or nasogastric medications while concomitantly receiving iv ranitidine. An educational memo was placed in the patient's chart if the patient was concurrently receiving oral or nasogastric medications and iv ranitidine. In phase 1, iv ranitidine was inappropriate either partially or totally in 51 percent of the cases. The median length of inappropriate iv therapy was five days. During the second phase, the pharmacy staff reviewed 4301 profiles of patients receiving iv ranitidine over eight months. Educational memos were placed in 451 patient charts (11 percent) where conversion from iv to oral therapy was feasible; a favorable follow-up occurred in 275 cases (61 percent). This would result in an estimated annual cost savings of $4685. Based on our ranitidine use review, extrapolating the median length of inappropriate iv therapy to five days would result in a yearly cost savings of $23425. This project demonstrated that staff pharmacists can impact on physician education and cost savings by routinely screening patient's medication profiles from the central pharmacy. A TWO-PHASE DRUG PROGRAM concentrating on inappropriate use of intravenous ranitidine was undertaken at a 612-bed university teaching hospital to demonstrate how pharmacists can make an impact on drug therapy both financially and clinically. Intravenous ranitidine was selected based on cost, frequent use, and potential for inappropriate use. Parenteral ranitidine offers no therapeutic advantage over oral therapy if the gastrointestinal tract is intact and functioning. 1 At our hospital, the cost of daily iv ranitidine (50 mg iv q8h) is $14.50, approximately eight times that of daily oral tablets (150 mg po q12h) which cost $1.75.
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