• Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2012

    Unrestricted access to sugammadex: impact on neuromuscular blocking agent choice, reversal practice and associated healthcare costs.

    Ledowski et al. investigated the effect of unrestricted access to sugammadex in an Australian teaching hospital with a retrospective observational audit.

    Use of both sugammadex and amino steroid relaxants increased dramatically, with average reversal costs per case increasing by AUS$85.

    Although there was no change in anaesthesia, surgical or PACU time, there was a statistically significant decrease in median time from surgery to hospital discharge (0.2 days shorter) after introduction of sugammadex. Do to the nature of the study, it is nevertheless impossible to infer a causal link.

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    • T Ledowski, S Hillyard, A Kozman, F Johnston, E Gillies, M Greenaway, and B C Kyle.
    • Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia. thomas.ledowski@health.wa.gov.au
    • Anaesth Intensive Care. 2012 Mar 1;40(2):340-3.

    AbstractSugammadex is known to rapidly and completely reverse the effects of amino-steroidal neuromuscular blocking agents. However, the high costs of sugammadex have so far prevented its introduction as the standard reversal agent in most healthcare systems. At the Royal Perth Hospital, sugammadex was recently introduced as an unrestricted alternative to neostigmine for the reversal of amino-steroidal neuromuscular blocking agents. The aim of this retrospective observational audit was to investigate the impact of this change on clinical practice and associated healthcare costs. Data from all patients intubated during a one-month period in April to May 2010 and for a similar period in 2011 were retrospectively collected and the use of neuromuscular blocking agents and reversal agents were identified and the associated costs were calculated. More steroidal neuromuscular blocking agents and sugammadex (+743%), but less glycopyrrolate and neostigmine (-48%) were used in 2011. Using the manufacturer's list price, muscle relaxation and reversal costs increased from about A$42 per case to about A$127 per case. Between the investigated time periods no differences were found for anaesthesia time, operating time or time spent in the post anaesthesia care unit. However, there was a statistically significant decrease in the time between surgery and discharge (median 2.0 vs 2.2 days). While the design of the audit was such that no inferences can be made about the cause of this change, this is an interesting observation worthy of further investigation.

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    This article appears in the collection: Is sugammadex as good as we think?.

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    1

    Ledowski et al. investigated the effect of unrestricted access to sugammadex in an Australian teaching hospital with a retrospective observational audit.

    Use of both sugammadex and amino steroid relaxants increased dramatically, with average reversal costs per case increasing by AUS$85.

    Although there was no change in anaesthesia, surgical or PACU time, there was a statistically significant decrease in median time from surgery to hospital discharge (0.2 days shorter) after introduction of sugammadex. Do to the nature of the study, it is nevertheless impossible to infer a causal link.

    Daniel Jolley  Daniel Jolley
     
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