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AuthorAl-Sulaiti, Fatima Khalifa
AuthorAlkhiyami, Dania
AuthorElmekaty, Eman Zeyad I.
AuthorAwaisu, Ahmed
AuthorKheir, Nadir
AuthorEl-Zubair, Ahmed
AuthorAl-Sulaiti, Hend Khalifa
Available date2024-09-25T06:13:40Z
Publication Date2024-07-12
Publication NameJournal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20523211.2024.2375753
CitationAl-Sulaiti, F. K., Alkhiyami, D., Elmekaty, E. Z. I., Awaisu, A., Kheir, N., El-Zubair, A., & Al-Sulaiti, H. K. (2024). Appropriateness of gentamicin therapeutic drug monitoring at a Middle Eastern tertiary hospital setting: a retrospective evaluation and quality audit. Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice, 17(1), 2375753.
ISSN2052-3211
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85198533236&origin=inward
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/59261
AbstractIntroduction: The use of gentamicin in the treatment of infectious diseases requires frequent monitoring to attain the best treatment outcomes. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the appropriateness of gentamicin therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) at a tertiary care hospital in Qatar. Methods: A one-year quantitative retrospective chart review of all gentamicin TDM records was conducted. Evidence-based criteria were applied to evaluate the appropriateness of gentamicin TDM in terms of indication, sampling times, and post-analytical actions. Results: Out of 59 captured gentamicin TDM records, 58 gentamicin samples were eligible for evaluation. Overall, gentamicin TDM appropriateness was achieved in 50% (n = 29) of the evaluated records. However, 12% (n = 7) of gentamicin drug concentrations were below the assay quantification limits or were not sampled appropriately. Inappropriate post-analytical actions (22.4%, n = 13) and inappropriate sampling times (44.8%, n = 26) were recorded. Most of the gentamicin blood samples (n = 43; 74.2%) were taken appropriately at steady-state. Inappropriate sampling time relative to the last dose was captured in 31% (n = 18) of the cases. Although 27.6% (n = 16) of gentamicin concentrations were non-therapeutic, continuing gentamicin dosing without adjustment was the most frequent post-analytical action (69.8%, n = 37). Gentamicin dose regimen continuations, dose regimen decreases and dose regimen discontinuations were inappropriately applied in 27% (n = 10), 25% (n = 2) and 14% (n = 1) of the times, respectively. Conclusion: Suboptimal gentamicin TDM practices exist in relation to sampling time and post-analytical actions. Studies exploring setting-specific reasons behind inappropriate TDM practices and methods of its optimisation are needed.
SponsorThis work was supported by Qatar University and Qatar National Research Fund. Open Access funding provided by the Qatar National Library.
Languageen
PublisherTaylor & Francis
Subjectaminoglycosides
antibiotics
audit
clinical pharmacokinetics
gentamicin
quality
Therapeutic drug monitoring
TitleAppropriateness of gentamicin therapeutic drug monitoring at a Middle Eastern tertiary hospital setting: a retrospective evaluation and quality audit
TypeArticle
Issue Number1
Volume Number17
ESSN2052-3211
dc.accessType Open Access


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