Optimizing Drug Delivery of Small-Volume Infusions
When administering intermittent secondary intravenous infusions, commonly referred to as intravenous piggyback (IVPB) infusions, residual medication remains in the administration set and bag. No previous studies exist examining the optimal technique to infuse the residual medication. The aims of thi...
Saved in:
Published in: | Journal of infusion nursing Vol. 41; no. 2; pp. 113 - 117 |
---|---|
Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
United States
Copyright by Infusion Nurses Society
01-03-2018
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Abstract | When administering intermittent secondary intravenous infusions, commonly referred to as intravenous piggyback (IVPB) infusions, residual medication remains in the administration set and bag. No previous studies exist examining the optimal technique to infuse the residual medication. The aims of this study were to identify various IVPB ancillary techniques used to administer medication residing in the secondary administration set and bag following an infusion, evaluate the potential drug loss associated with each technique, and recommend a standard ancillary technique for administration of select small-volume IVPB infusions. Qualitative and quantitative tests were performed, leading to a recommendation for a standard ancillary technique for select small-volume IVPB infusions. |
---|---|
AbstractList | When administering intermittent secondary intravenous infusions, commonly referred to as intravenous
piggyback
(IVPB) infusions, residual medication remains in the administration set and bag. No previous studies exist examining the optimal technique to infuse the residual medication. The aims of this study were to identify various IVPB ancillary techniques used to administer medication residing in the secondary administration set and bag following an infusion, evaluate the potential drug loss associated with each technique, and recommend a standard ancillary technique for administration of select small-volume IVPB infusions. Qualitative and quantitative tests were performed, leading to a recommendation for a standard ancillary technique for select small-volume IVPB infusions. When administering intermittent secondary intravenous infusions, commonly referred to as intravenous piggyback (IVPB) infusions, residual medication remains in the administration set and bag. No previous studies exist examining the optimal technique to infuse the residual medication. The aims of this study were to identify various IVPB ancillary techniques used to administer medication residing in the secondary administration set and bag following an infusion, evaluate the potential drug loss associated with each technique, and recommend a standard ancillary technique for administration of select small-volume IVPB infusions. Qualitative and quantitative tests were performed, leading to a recommendation for a standard ancillary technique for select small-volume IVPB infusions. |
Author | Piddoubny, Maria Ednalino, Ryan Terry, Colin L Thoele, Kelli |
AuthorAffiliation | Indiana University Health, Indianapolis, Indiana (Ms Thoele, Dr Ednalino, and Mr Terry); and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Dr Piddoubny). Kelli Thoele, MSN, RN, ACNS-BC, BMTCN®, OCN®, is a clinical nurse specialist at Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana. She is interested in evidence-based practice and safe handling of hazardous drugs. Maria Piddoubny, PharmD, BCOP, is a PGY-2 graduate of Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana, now working as a hematology/oncology patient care pharmacist at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her interests include chemotherapy medication safety and translational research in oncology genomics. Ryan Ednalino, PharmD, is a medication safety clinical pharmacist for Indiana University Health. He oversees medication safety initiatives across the multifacility hospital system. He serves on pharmacy and therapeutics and multiple system medication safety committees. C |
AuthorAffiliation_xml | – name: Indiana University Health, Indianapolis, Indiana (Ms Thoele, Dr Ednalino, and Mr Terry); and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Dr Piddoubny). Kelli Thoele, MSN, RN, ACNS-BC, BMTCN®, OCN®, is a clinical nurse specialist at Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana. She is interested in evidence-based practice and safe handling of hazardous drugs. Maria Piddoubny, PharmD, BCOP, is a PGY-2 graduate of Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana, now working as a hematology/oncology patient care pharmacist at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her interests include chemotherapy medication safety and translational research in oncology genomics. Ryan Ednalino, PharmD, is a medication safety clinical pharmacist for Indiana University Health. He oversees medication safety initiatives across the multifacility hospital system. He serves on pharmacy and therapeutics and multiple system medication safety committees. Colin L. Terry, MS, is a biostatistician and serves as program manager for data services at Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana. He consults and collaborates on a wide variety of research projects and serves on several institutional boards as a lead statistical reviewer |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Kelli surname: Thoele fullname: Thoele, Kelli organization: Indiana University Health, Indianapolis, Indiana (Ms Thoele, Dr Ednalino, and Mr Terry); and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Dr Piddoubny). Kelli Thoele, MSN, RN, ACNS-BC, BMTCN®, OCN®, is a clinical nurse specialist at Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana. She is interested in evidence-based practice and safe handling of hazardous drugs. Maria Piddoubny, PharmD, BCOP, is a PGY-2 graduate of Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana, now working as a hematology/oncology patient care pharmacist at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her interests include chemotherapy medication safety and translational research in oncology genomics. Ryan Ednalino, PharmD, is a medication safety clinical pharmacist for Indiana University Health. He oversees medication safety initiatives across the multifacility hospital system. He serves on pharmacy and therapeutics and multiple system medication safety committees. Colin L. Terry, MS, is a biostatistician and serves as program manager for data services at Indiana University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana. He consults and collaborates on a wide variety of research projects and serves on several institutional boards as a lead statistical reviewer – sequence: 2 givenname: Maria surname: Piddoubny fullname: Piddoubny, Maria – sequence: 3 givenname: Ryan surname: Ednalino fullname: Ednalino, Ryan – sequence: 4 givenname: Colin surname: Terry middlename: L fullname: Terry, Colin L |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29489706$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
BookMark | eNpdkElPwzAQhS1URGnhHyCUIxcXr3F8rMpWqWoPLFfLSR0acOJiN1Tl1-PSsog5zLzDm29Grwc6jWsMAGcYDTCS4nI6nA7Q3yJpdgCOMacSojQVnS9NIWY864JeCC8IYS4IOQJdIlkmBUqPAZktV1VdfVTNc3Ll29iMrd6N3ySuTO5rbS18cratTTJuyjZUrgkn4LDUNpjT_eyDx5vrh9EdnMxux6PhBBaUEw41wXrO8VwXLC2ZzDFiRtKMSm1okUuCqdBCF5TwqFhZIpwJURRZinQudE5oH1zsuEvv3loTVqquQmGs1Y1xbVAEIclTSQiPVrazFt6F4E2plr6qtd8ojNQ2LRXTUv_Timvn-wttXpv5z9J3PL_ctbMr48OrbdfGq4XRdrWIPExkhhgk8XdEIxRuyZx-AkXVdLE |
CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_12968_bjon_2020_29_2_S8 crossref_primary_10_12968_bjon_2020_29_2_S6 crossref_primary_10_1093_jac_dkz365 crossref_primary_10_1097_NAN_0000000000000355 |
Cites_doi | 10.1002/ajh.24228 10.1016/S0140-6736(05)67110-3 10.2146/ajhp080434 10.1093/jac/43.4.601 |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | Copyright 2018 by Infusion Nurses Society |
Copyright_xml | – notice: Copyright 2018 by Infusion Nurses Society |
DBID | CGR CUY CVF ECM EIF NPM AAYXX CITATION 7X8 |
DOI | 10.1097/NAN.0000000000000268 |
DatabaseName | Medline MEDLINE MEDLINE (Ovid) MEDLINE MEDLINE PubMed CrossRef MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitle | MEDLINE Medline Complete MEDLINE with Full Text PubMed MEDLINE (Ovid) CrossRef MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitleList | CrossRef MEDLINE - Academic MEDLINE |
Database_xml | – sequence: 1 dbid: ECM name: MEDLINE url: https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=cmedm&site=ehost-live sourceTypes: Index Database |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Pharmacy, Therapeutics, & Pharmacology Nursing |
EISSN | 1539-0667 |
EndPage | 117 |
ExternalDocumentID | 10_1097_NAN_0000000000000268 29489706 00129804-201803000-00005 |
Genre | Journal Article |
GroupedDBID | - .Z2 0-6 08R 0R 3T 3T~ 4Q1 4Q2 4Q3 5GY 5RE 5VS 9V3 AAMTA AARTV AAWTL AAYEP ABBUW ABFLS ABHRE ABILE ABPPZ ABXVJ ABZAD ACDDN ACEWG ACGFS ACIFK ACJBD ACNCT ACWDW ACWRI ACXNZ ADEGP ADFPA ADNKB AE3 AFYGQ AGBRE AHULI AHVBC AJIOK AJNYG ALBXT ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS AMJPA ASCII ATPOU AWKKM AXR BQLVK C45 CS3 DUNZO E.X EBS EJD EX3 F5P FL- GJ H0 H0~ HYJ HZ I6D IN IN~ JF9 JG8 JK3 JK8 K8S KD2 L-C LK2 MPPUT N~6 N~M O9- OAG OAH OBZCC OCUKA ODA OEN OFFRU OGKNY OHASI OKBHI OLL OLW ON2 ONU OPUJH OROCO ORVUJ OUGNH OUVQU OUVZD OVD OVDLW OVDNE OVOZU OWY OXXIT R58 RIG RLZ RSW S4R S4S V2I WOQ WOW X3V X3W Z2 --- .GJ 0R~ AAAAV AAHPQ AAIQE AASCR AAUEB ABASU ABDIG ABJNI ABVCZ ACEWU ACGFO ACILI ACJIL ACTHT ACXJB ADGGA ADHPY ADRCX ADTGS AEETU AEQHQ AFDTB AFMFG AFSOK AHQNM AHWXW AINUH AJEOO AJNWD AJZMW ALMTX AMKUR AMNEI AOHHW BS7 CGR CUY CVF DIWNM ECM EEVPB EIF FCALG GNXGY GQDEL HLJTE HZ~ IKREB IPNFZ IYOWL MMDCI N4W NPM OHCKH ONSOO ORAPC OWU OWV OWX OWZ QMB T8P TEORI TSPGW VVN W3M WG1 XXN XYM YFH ZFV ZZMQN AAYXX CITATION 7X8 |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c3525-a21ad51dac46f49b104e93839ae3cb92137a7ac3251374ff01877cc860ab7ab23 |
ISSN | 1533-1458 |
IngestDate | Fri Aug 16 00:56:10 EDT 2024 Thu Nov 21 20:54:30 EST 2024 Wed Oct 16 00:57:14 EDT 2024 Thu Aug 13 19:44:26 EDT 2020 |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 2 |
Language | English |
LinkModel | OpenURL |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c3525-a21ad51dac46f49b104e93839ae3cb92137a7ac3251374ff01877cc860ab7ab23 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
PMID | 29489706 |
PQID | 2009569225 |
PQPubID | 23479 |
PageCount | 5 |
ParticipantIDs | proquest_miscellaneous_2009569225 crossref_primary_10_1097_NAN_0000000000000268 pubmed_primary_29489706 wolterskluwer_health_00129804-201803000-00005 |
ProviderPackageCode | OVOZU L-C ALBXT OGKNY C45 AARTV ADFPA OVDLW AFYGQ ASCII ODA OLL ABZAD ABBUW LK2 JK3 9V3 ADNKB JK8 H0~ ATPOU ACJBD JG8 OKBHI OLW OUGNH 3T~ OHASI AHVBC AJNYG FL- K8S OFFRU AJIOK OPUJH V2I S4R ON2 S4S 4Q1 DUNZO OAG 4Q2 OVDNE 4Q3 AMJPA OAH OEN AGBRE OVD AHULI ACEWG .Z2 N~6 OROCO AWKKM OUVQU I6D ONU ORVUJ ADEGP HYJ 0-6 X3V OUVZD X3W ACDDN ACIFK ACWRI AAMTA E.X OCUKA OWY ACXNZ ABILE ABXVJ IN~ KD2 OXXIT ACWDW AXR JF9 OBZCC |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 2018-March/April |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2018-03-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 03 year: 2018 text: 2018-March/April |
PublicationDecade | 2010 |
PublicationPlace | United States |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: United States |
PublicationTitle | Journal of infusion nursing |
PublicationTitleAlternate | J Infus Nurs |
PublicationYear | 2018 |
Publisher | Copyright by Infusion Nurses Society |
Publisher_xml | – name: Copyright by Infusion Nurses Society |
References | Aminzadeh (R5-20230822) 2014; 7 Rybak (R4-20230822) 2009; 66 Tavitian (R2-20230822) 2016; 91 Colleoni (R3-20230822) 2005; 366 Gorski (R8-20230822) 2016; 39 Sevinç (R1-20230822) 1999; 43 |
References_xml | – volume: 91 start-page: 193 issue: 2 year: 2016 ident: R2-20230822 article-title: Impact of obesity in favorable‐risk AML patients receiving intensive chemotherapy publication-title: Am J Hematol doi: 10.1002/ajh.24228 contributor: fullname: Tavitian – volume: 366 start-page: 1108 issue: 9491 year: 2005 ident: R3-20230822 article-title: Relation between chemotherapy dose, oestrogen receptor expression, and body-mass index publication-title: Lancet doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(05)67110-3 contributor: fullname: Colleoni – volume: 66 start-page: 82 issue: 1 year: 2009 ident: R4-20230822 article-title: Therapeutic monitoring of vancomycin in adult patients: a consensus review of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, the Infectious Diseases Society of America, and the Society of Infectious Diseases Pharmacists publication-title: Am J Health Syst Pharm doi: 10.2146/ajhp080434 contributor: fullname: Rybak – volume: 43 start-page: 601 issue: 4 year: 1999 ident: R1-20230822 article-title: Early switch from intravenous to oral antibiotics: guidelines and implementation in a large teaching hospital publication-title: J Antimicrob Chemother doi: 10.1093/jac/43.4.601 contributor: fullname: Sevinç – volume: 7 start-page: e12831 issue: 10 year: 2014 ident: R5-20230822 article-title: Vancomycin minimum inhibitory concentration for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections; is there difference in mortality between patients? publication-title: Jundishapur J Microbiol contributor: fullname: Aminzadeh – volume: 39 start-page: S1 issue: suppl 1 year: 2016 ident: R8-20230822 article-title: Infusion therapy standards of practice publication-title: J Infus Nurs contributor: fullname: Gorski |
SSID | ssj0015722 |
Score | 2.2038395 |
Snippet | When administering intermittent secondary intravenous infusions, commonly referred to as intravenous piggyback (IVPB) infusions, residual medication remains in... When administering intermittent secondary intravenous infusions, commonly referred to as intravenous piggyback (IVPB) infusions, residual medication remains in... |
SourceID | proquest crossref pubmed wolterskluwer |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Index Database Publisher |
StartPage | 113 |
SubjectTerms | Humans Infusions, Intravenous - instrumentation Infusions, Intravenous - methods Infusions, Intravenous - nursing Nursing Pharmaceutical Preparations |
Title | Optimizing Drug Delivery of Small-Volume Infusions |
URI | http://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&NEWS=n&CSC=Y&PAGE=fulltext&D=ovft&AN=00129804-201803000-00005 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29489706 https://search.proquest.com/docview/2009569225 |
Volume | 41 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV1La9wwEBZNQqGllDZ9ZPtChZJLo9ZvWcdl45DQZRMap-RmJFmGpRs77NaU7a_vyJIf2-0hPdQHYWSQYWb4NCPNfIPQh8hhihaxS0ToKALxlyKsEJIUDuM5i7gvhK4dPr2ks-v4OAmSvttoP_dfNQ1zoGtdOfsP2u4WhQl4B53DCFqH8U56PwcMuJn_0icAx8saBrXQqRfNRfrlDV8syLcGkAAZinrVndZt-6dz-73NDhikkCiTg_xFk3l22DrP86oW5dpWAM07vE9y7ew3Lb4_fl331piqpbnDn-jGQbb8wR5AuHGfgfVJtaDZMBnQIaoaOitrPd4AIl1Te2p3W9dUbm4BuSEIno1nhmCyfTzTg2eTN3t2np1cTadZmlynO2jPA8gBxNsbT86mZ92NUkg9ry2dZPTz31bedE224o2H6NHPSqcwrL43FQwDPyR9gh5bBeGx0fxTdE-V--i-PfTZR4cXhot8fYTTvrRudYQP8UXPUr5-hrzeULA2FNwaCq4KPDQU3BnKc3R1kqSTU2IbaBCpWW4J91yeh27OZRAVARMQeivmg0vMlS8F81yfcsqlDz6uT4Oi0A0aqZRx5HBBufD8F2i3rEp1gHAoIbSOcs55LAMlGGwEEJhSN3ck5cyJRoi0sstuDU9K1uY3gKyzP2U9Qu9bAWcAaPqWipeqqle6LyrE7Az2mRF6aSTfreixIGa0-duGKjJTNJw1x6qxExBtp7B9GdYEJ3x1h7-9Rg96636Ddn8sa_UW7azy-p21pd8WNn4a |
link.rule.ids | 315,782,786,27933,27934,64549,64569,65344,65364 |
linkProvider | Ovid |
linkToHtml | http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwvV1Zj5RAEK7obIwa47Fe44mJ4Wl75W76gQecw1ldcRJYdZ9I0zSJcRY2y6IZf71d9LC7anzwRR6AhCukiqK-Or4CeBlYTNIqtEnhW5Io_CUJqwpBKovxkgXcLQrsHV6kNPkcTmdIkzPUqmLzWXu8i5veTOMOjsNBXJhFb1MzmX1Ko9qcpJPo0FzGb2Z9mBqLJMxp1HyrTs04ifroSmh5SgXsUGmxbp5GptOtwHcDbwRb8XyavT5LN_iaMRF9H2J7fjj02DH6KokTzXE4LA6ysl78h_3hmF6HG98bzHW3X_tS9ws_rPmt__Sqt-HmxqM1Yq2Cd-CSrLfhyiYKsQ3mUpNjr3eM7LzXq90xTGN5Tpu9vgvOB2W9jr78UFcZ05NOreQKi0bWRlMZ6RFfrcjH3pQae3XVYZCvvQcH81k2WZDNRAcikHaVcMfmpW-XXHhB5bFCYUHJFEZmXLqiYI7tUk65cJXT5VKvqnBiIBUiDCxeUF447n0Y1U0tH4LhC4X1gpJzHgpPFkxZJoWUqF1agnJmBWMgg4zyY03ckQ8JdyXT_HeZjuHFIMhcfWGYNuG1bLoWB3UqEMmU4RvDAy3hszs6zAsZ7Z_2i8hz3cWa_008j_7x_OdwdZG938_395J3j-EaHtWFcE9gdHrSyadwuS27Zxu9_gnIafxA |
linkToPdf | http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwvV1Lb9QwELagFQiEeJTX8gwSyqmGvB0fcgibXVpAYaVseZwix7ElxDapmga0_Hpm4k1bQBy4kEMSKS9F33g845n5hpDnkcMV07FLq9BRFPwvRbmuJNUOFzWPhF9VWDu8V7D8U5zNkCZnjOBj8Vl39AIPg5rGE2yHg37hMnlT2NNimny289nHIsntRfp6NixTY5KEvcjmydrOkvabPrHTPBnWWGInAEFwY5BlU0KNfKfbEZgNMAS203m2fHUadAgNbyJaQNQNwnistOPsZZ7mhulw3DzkZj0_k_1hnl4l1763GPHuvg4J7-emrfmN__rDN8n1jXVrpUYcb5ELqtkhlzYrEjvEXhii7PWutTyr--p2LdtanFFor28T7z1ossMvP-ApKzvuYadWmECytlptFYditaIfBrVq7Te6xwW_7g45mM-W0z266e5AJVKwUuG5og7dWsgg0gGvwC9UHPxlLpQvK-65PhNMSB8MMJ8FWmP3QCZlHDmiYqLy_Ltkq2kbdZ9YoQS_L6qFELEMVMVBS4HXxNzakUxwJ5oQOiJVHhkSj3IMvgOy5e_ITsizEc4SRhuGUESj2r7Dpp3gUHJQghNyz-B8-kaPBzFnw9d-Ab40Fa3l3-B58I_3PyWXAfny3X7-9iG5ghdNTtwjsnVy3KvH5GJX9082wv0TUXn_Ig |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Optimizing+Drug+Delivery+of+Small-Volume+Infusions&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+infusion+nursing&rft.au=Thoele%2C+Kelli&rft.au=Piddoubny%2C+Maria&rft.au=Ednalino%2C+Ryan&rft.au=Terry%2C+Colin+L&rft.date=2018-03-01&rft.eissn=1539-0667&rft.volume=41&rft.issue=2&rft.spage=113&rft.epage=117&rft_id=info:doi/10.1097%2FNAN.0000000000000268&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1533-1458&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1533-1458&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1533-1458&client=summon |