The impact of logarithmic dose banding of anticancer drugs on pharmacy compounding efficiency at Ghent University Hospital

BackgroundDose banding (DB) (dose rounding with predetermined variation with prescription) enables in-advance preparation of high-turnover anticancer drugs with potential benefit for pharmacy compounding work flow.ObjectivesTo analyse the impact of potential situations on the efficiency of DB in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of hospital pharmacy : science and practice 2018-11, Vol.25 (6), p.334-336
Hauptverfasser: Claus, Barbara, Pourcq, Kaat De, Clottens, Nele, Kruse, Vibeke, Gemmel, Paul, Vandenbroucke, Johan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BackgroundDose banding (DB) (dose rounding with predetermined variation with prescription) enables in-advance preparation of high-turnover anticancer drugs with potential benefit for pharmacy compounding work flow.ObjectivesTo analyse the impact of potential situations on the efficiency of DB in the pharmacy (safe and maximum storage), calculate preparation lead times and the potential full-time equivalent (FTE) benefit.MethodsCandidate intravenous anticancer drugs were selected for logarithmic DB according to prescribing frequency, infusion volume and stability (usage data 2015 of the tertiary Ghent University Hospital, Belgium). With a selected DB set already stored, a 2-week time study (April/November 2015) provided lead times (between prescription and transfer) for just-in-time and DB preparations. A ‘maximal’ storage (using all drugs with a relative incidence of ≥2% recurrent monthly prescription) and a ‘safe’ storage scenario (lowest monthly prescribing pattern) were used to calculate the potential future FTE change.ResultsMean lead times for DB storage and just-in-time preparation were 17.1 min (95% CI 13.5 to 21.0) and 26.5 min (23.3 to 29.8). For 21 164 yearly preparations with already 5292 in DB (25%), 11 157 and 6 862 could be batch-produced in advance in a maximum storage and safe storage scenario, respectively. The existing FTE in 2015 of 5.41 could then be reduced to 4.91 and 5.27.ConclusionFurther development of DB could contribute to pharmacy compounding efficiency.
ISSN:2047-9956
2047-9964
DOI:10.1136/ejhpharm-2016-001093