Back to Search Start Over

Analysing and improving preoperative medication management in cardiac surgery

Authors :
Benedict Morath
Andreas D. Meid
Marcin Zaradzki
Carolin Geßele
Stefanie Nüse
Ute Chiriac
Torsten Hoppe‐Tichy
Matthias Karck
Jasmin Soethoff
Source :
British journal of clinical pharmacologyREFERENCES.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The objective of this study was to analyse the preoperative medication management within the cardiac surgery patient population and measure the effectiveness of an interprofessional intervention in routine care.A jointly developed preoperative medication management was implemented in routine care on multiple levels (inclusion in admission letter to primary care, hotline for inquiries, pocket cards for physicians and correspondence with referring centres). The effectiveness was evaluated by analysing preoperative management before and after implementation. The primary endpoint was the number of drugs managed correctly according to the guidelines after implementation. Secondary endpoints consisted amongst others of bleeding on the intensive care unit, re-thoracotomy, postoperative infarction and cerebrovascular complications. Additionally, possible associations between the correct management and different variables were investigated by multivariate analysis.After the implementation, the number of drugs managed correctly according to guidelines increased from 54.0 to 73.5% (P .001). The effect was more prominent for direct oral anticoagulants and prophylactic aspirin where the guideline adherence increased from 29.2 to 74.5% and from 78.6 to 95.1%, respectively. No difference was seen for sodium-glucose transporter-2 inhibitors, metformin, vitamin-K antagonists and dual-antiplatelet therapy. Secondary endpoints showed no safety signals with regard to bleeding or thrombotic events. In multivariate analysis, the intervention was effective (odds ratio 2.17, 95% confidence interval [1.32-3.62]) after adjusting for possible confounders.An interprofessional programme was effective to improve preoperative medication management in cardiac surgery patients. Sodium-glucose transporter-2 inhibitors, metformin and direct oral anticoagulants appear to be especially at risk for incorrect management before cardiac surgery with possible adverse events.

Details

ISSN :
13652125
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British journal of clinical pharmacologyREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....982c8acbbf436661beec785b18a45a60