Intravenous to Oral Conversion of Antihypertensives: A Toolkit for Guideline Development

Objective: To provide a toolkit of information for hospitals to use in developing intravenous to oral conversion protocols for antihypertensives. Data Sources: Articles describing intravenous to oral conversion protocols for any therapeutic category were identified in an English-language MEDLINE sea...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Annals of pharmacotherapy 2010-09, Vol.44 (9), p.1430-1447
Hauptverfasser: Dasta, Joseph F, Boucher, Bradley A, Brophy, Gretchen M, Cohen, Henry, Hassan, Erkan, MacLaren, Robert, Muzykovsky, Karina, Martin, Steven J, Pass, Steven E, Seybert, Amy L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: To provide a toolkit of information for hospitals to use in developing intravenous to oral conversion protocols for antihypertensives. Data Sources: Articles describing intravenous to oral conversion protocols for any therapeutic category were identified in an English-language MEDLINE search (1990-April 2010) using a wide variety of MeSH terms. References from selected articles were reviewed for additional material. Study Selection and Data Extraction: Experimental and observational English-language studies and review articles that focused on oral transition of intravenous drugs were selected. Data Synthesis: Most of the literature on conversion from intravenous to oral formulations involves antimicrobials. There is considerable evidence documenting reduced costs and improved patient flow through the health-care system following implementing these protocols with drugs like antimicrobials, histamine-2 receptor antagonists, and proton pump inhibitors. Although antihypertensives have not been studied, principles and implementation strategies used for other drug classes can be applied to antihypertensives. Guidance is provided on framing the problem, issues surrounding oral absorption principles, information pertaining to oral conversion in specific disease slates, and implementation and documentation strategies. Detailed tables of oral and intravenous antihypertensives are provided. Conclusions: We recommend that hospitals consider developing protocols on conversion of intravenous to oral antihypertensives in an attempt to reduce unnecessarily prolonged intravenous therapy. Information contained in this article can be used as a toolkit to select information specific to the characteristics of individual health-care systems.
ISSN:1060-0280
1542-6270
DOI:10.1345/aph.1P086