# Weight-Based Standardized Sugammadex Dosing in Pediatrics: A Quality Improvement Initiative to Improve Compliance with Dosing Guidelines and Reduce Waste and Cost

**Authors:** Sydney E. S. Brown, Michael Meyer, Andrea Meyer, Ruth Cassidy, Xinyi Zhao, Deborah Wagner, Laura Wetzel, Douglas A. Colquhoun

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/2024/6049114 · Anesthesiology Research and Practice · 2024-08-24

## TL;DR

This study shows that dividing sugammadex vials into smaller doses reduced medication waste in children but led to more frequent underdosing.

## Contribution

The novel approach of fractionating sugammadex vials to reduce waste in pediatric patients is evaluated for its impact on dosing accuracy and cost.

## Key findings

- Fractionating sugammadex vials reduced waste from 4.2 mg/kg to 0.22 mg/kg per case.
- Underdosing increased, with more patients receiving less than the recommended 2.2 mg/kg.
- Dose appropriateness based on TOF measurements declined post-intervention.

## Abstract

Sugammadex vials were fractionated into 25, 50, or 100 mg aliquots, which would be distributed to anesthesia staff by pharmacy staff in approximate 2 mg/kg of actual body weight doses (±10%). We analyzed changes in sugammadex waste and dosing practices 1/1/2019 to 3/15/2023 pre/postintervention (4/1/2021). We gauged dose appropriateness using last train of four (TOF) prior to sugammadex administration.

7,889 patients 2–17 years (4,771 with documented TOF), ASA 1–4 receiving general anesthesia with a steroidal NMB medication and sugammadex reversal. Pre- and postintervention mean doses were 2.5 mg/kg (SD: 1.2) and 2.4 mg/kg (SD: 0.96), respectively. A smaller proportion of cases received standard 2 or 4 mg/kg doses (pre: 77.6 vs. post: 66.7%). Mean waste per case declined from 4.2 mg/kg (SD: 4.1) to 0.22 mg/kg (SD: 0.38). Among cases with 0 or 1 measured twitches on TOF that should receive at least 4 mg/kg, fewer received at least 3.6 mg/kg (post: 56.7% vs. pre: 66.8%), and a greater proportion received less than 2.2 mg/kg (post: 27.4% vs. pre: 20.7%). Among cases that should have received at least 2 mg/kg by TOF, the proportion of patients receiving more than 3.6 mg/kg declined from 9.5% to 5.2%. Discussion. Fractionating sugammadex vials was associated with decreases in waste, but not dose, and significant underdosing was more likely to occur. While vial fractionation could enable increased access to sugammadex and other costly medications, it may introduce unintended consequences.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** sugammadex (PubChem CID 6918585)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** twitches on TOF (MESH:D000095027)
- **Chemicals:** Sugammadex (MESH:D000077122), ASA (MESH:D001241)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

17 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11366054/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11366054