| Literature DB >> 33087096 |
Nadia Roumeliotis1,2,3, Eleanor Pullenayegum4,5, Paula Rochon6,7,8, Anna Taddio4,9, Chris Parshuram10,4,5,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is no globally accepted definition for dosing error in adult or pediatric practice. The definition of pediatric dosing error varies greatly in the literature. The objective of this study was to develop a framework, informed by a set of principles, for a clinician-based definition of drug dosing errors in critically ill children, and to identify the range that practitioners agree is a dosing error for different drug classes and clinical scenarios.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; Dosing; Error; Pediatrics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33087096 PMCID: PMC7576795 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-020-02384-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Fig. 1Flow chart of expert clinician participation in Delphi, and responses throughout rounds
Demographics of included expert participants
| Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physician | 26 (62) | 23 (61) | 24 (65) |
| Pharmacist | 13 (31) | 13 (34) | 11 (30) |
| Nurse | 3 (7) | 2 (5) | 2 (5) |
| 5–10 yearsa | 18 (43) | 15 (39) | 15 (41) |
| 10–15 years | 7 (17) | 12 (32) | 10 (27) |
| > 15 years | 17 (40) | 11 (29) | 12 (32) |
| < 10 beds | 3 (7) | 3 (8) | 3 (8) |
| 10–15 beds | 16 (38) | 11 (19) | 13 (35) |
| 16–20 beds | 7 (17) | 8 (21) | 5 (14) |
| 21–25 beds | 6 (14) | 4 (10) | 3 (8) |
| > 25 beds | 10 (24) | 12 (32) | 13 (35) |
| British-Columbia | 3 (7) | 3 (8) | 2 (5) |
| Alberta | 3 (7) | 2 (5) | 2 (5) |
| Manitoba | 4 (10) | 2 (5) | 3 (8) |
| Ontario | 14 (33) | 13 (34) | 16 (43) |
| Quebec | 17 (40) | 17 (40) | 13 (35) |
| Nova-Scotia | 1 (2) | 1 (3) | 1 (3) |
PICU Pediatric Intensive Care Unit
a1 participant with 5 years’ experience (including fellowship) was included
Principles of dosing error, agreement statement, and proportion of consensus agreementa for each statement
| Proportion of agreement (%) | |
|---|---|
| Dosing a drug above reference range, but the drug dose was intercepted (near-miss) and did not reach patient | |
| Dosing a drug below the minimum recommended dose, when the drug is possibly life-saving | |
| Dosing a drug in a dose that is predicted to give serum levels below desired therapeutic range (e.g. 50% below lower limit target) | |
| Dosing a drug by weight, without accounting for a significant drug interaction | |
| Dosing a drug in a dose that is likely to give serum levels above desired therapeutic range (e.g. 50% above upper limit target) | |
| Dosing a drug by weight, without adjusting for age | |
| Dosing a drug by weight, without accounting for body surface area | |
| Dosing a drug dose above the maximum dose recommended in the hospital formulary, guideline or reference sources | |
| Dosing a drug above the maximum recommended dose, in a patient who is in end-of life care | |
| Dosing a drug above the maximum recommended dose in a patient who is on ECMOb | |
| Dosing a drug above the maximum recommended dose, when the drug is possibly life-saving (e.g. antibiotics in sepsis) | |
| Dosing a drug by weight, without adjusting for renal insufficiency (Creatinine 50% higher than baseline) | |
| Dosing a drug dose that cannot easily be administered using dosage forms available | |
| None | |
| Dosing a drug at a dose where the patient has had a previous severe adverse event | Partial agreementc |
| Dosing a drug for which the use is off-label in children (i.e. prescribed for a condition that it is not officially approved for) | Partial agreementd |
N for Round 1 is 42, N for Round 37, N for Round 3 is 36
aConsensus agreement established a priori was > = 70% for Round 1, and > =60% for Rounds 2 and 3.
bECMO: Extra-Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation.
cN = 21 (58%) responded “Yes, definitely dosing error”, N = 1 “Yes, probable dosing error” and N = 14 (39%) “May or May not be error”. N total = 36 participants.
dN = 20 (55%) “No Definitely not a dosing error”, N = 12 (33%) “No, probably not a dosing error”, N = 3 (8%) “May or may not be a dosing error”, N = 1 (3%) “I don’t know”. N total = 36 participants.
Proportion below and above reference range dosing that expert participants would consider is a dosing error, and proportion of consensus agreement
| Drug Class and Patient characteristics | Threshold for dosing error below reference range (% consensus) | Threshold for dosing error Above reference range (% consensus) |
|---|---|---|
| In a patient with normal renal functiona | 10% (81) | 10% (79) |
| In a patient with acute renal failureb | 10% (76) | 10% (74) |
| In stable patient, no organ dysfunction | 10% (68) | Partial agreementc |
| In patient with normal hepatic function | 10% (74) | 10% (76) |
| In a patient with acute hepatic failure | 10% (76) | 10% (74) |
| In an opioid naïve patient with normal organ function | 10% (66) | 10% (71) |
| In a patient with an opioid tolerance | 10% (63) | Partial agreementd |
| In a patient with acute renal failureb | 10% (74) | 10% (79) |
| In a patient with a previous opioid related adverse eventh | Partial agreemente | Partial agreemente |
| In an opioid naïve patient with normal organ function | 10% (61) | 10% (79) |
| In a patient with acute renal failureb | 10% (66) | 10% (84) |
| In a patient with a previous opioid related adverse eventh | Partial agreementf | 10% (60) |
| In a stable patient, no organ dysfunction | 10% (71) | 10% (73) |
| In a patient with a previous heparin-related hemorrhage | Partial agreementg | 1% (71) |
| In stable patient, no organ dysfunction | 10% (66) | Partial agreementi |
aAssume moderate infection, normal hepatic function and normal BMI. No drug levels yet.
bAssume moderate infection, normal hepatic function and normal BMI. No drug levels yet. Renal dosing adjustment with Creatinine 2x normal
cN = 20 suggested > 20% for upper threshold, and N = 12 suggested > 10%, N = 4 blank. N total = 36.
dN = 19 suggested > 10% for upper threshold, and N = 7 suggested > 10%, N = 5 > 50%. N total = 36.
eN = 6 would not give drug at all. For overdoing, N = 22 (58%) answered 1–10%, N = 7 (18%) answered > 10%, N = 1 answered> 20%, N = 1 blank.
For under-dosing, N = 18 (47%) answered 21–50%, N = 6 (16%) answered 11–20%.
fN = 6 would not give drug at all, N = 14 suggested > 10% for upper threshold, and N = 9 suggested > 10%.
gN = 3 (8%) answered 1–10%, N = 21 answered > 10% (58%), N = 7 answered > 20% (19%), N = 2 answered > 50%, N = 4 blank or I don’t know. N total = 37.
hAdverse drug event occurred with the drug dose in reference range, and resulted in a 2-day prolongation of hospital stay.
iN = 12 answered > 10% (32%), N = 21 answered > 20% (57%), N = 1 answered > 51%, N = 3 blank. N total = 37.
Consensus not achieved for 2/15 principles.