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Most pediatric chemotherapy mistakes reach patients
Chemotherapeutic drugs have been credited with significant gains in survival from pediatric cancers. However, they are among the most toxic medications used today. Calculating dose, route, and frequency, which are often based on a childs weight, are critical to ensure that the drug concentration in the blood is within its narrow safety margins. Medication errors are common during pediatric hospitalizations, occurring in almost 6 percent of all medicine orders for pediatric inpatients. One of the only comprehensive studies of pediatric chemotherapy errors observed that 13 percent of such errors reached children and 2 percent were serious and mandatory intervention. Dr. Marlene Miller of Johns Hopkins University and his colleagues conducted a comprehensive review of a nationwide medicine error database of inpatient facilities and outpatient clinics to characterize the patterns of errors and their causes for children receiving chemotherapy. Between 1999 and 2004, 829,492 errors were reported, of which 29,802 involved patients under 18 years old and 310 of these involved a chemotherapeutic drug. The authors of the study observed that 85 percent of these errors reached the patients. Sixteen percent were serious enough to require escalation of care, of which five patients mandatory therapy or longer hospitalization. Of the 387 chemotherapeutic agents reported, the ones most usually linked to errors were part of the antimetabolite class (40 percent), which includes Methotrexate (15 percent) and Cytarabine (12 percent). Almost half of all errors occurred in administration of the drug and errors were usually correlation to improper dosing (23 percent), timing or frequency (23 percent). Interestingly, in comparison to inpatient facilities, outpatient clinics were more likely to involve prescribing and dose calculation errors. Over 40 percent of errors were attributed to a "performance deficit" while communication and knowledge deficits accounted for only 9 percent and 7 percent, respectively. Outpatient errors were more likely to be attributed to the delivery device, brand name similarities and stress. Dr. Miller and her coauthors concluded that pediatric chemotherapy errors often reach the patient. These errors, they explained, "were potentially harmful to the pediatric patient population and differed in quality between outpatient and inpatient oncology areas." Since most of the errors occurred during administration of the drug, not prescribing, "pediatric hospitals and future quality improvement research should target medicine administration safeguards for these high risk medications and consider different and specific solutions for inpatient and outpatient pediatric oncology units respectively". Posted by: Andria Source |
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