Getting Pabrinex Right: A Multi-cycle Quality Improvement Study Reducing Waste in Thiamine Prescribing at a Scottish District General Hospital
Thomas W Noteman, Damien McCoy

TL;DR
This study reduced unnecessary IV thiamine prescriptions in patients with alcohol use disorders through targeted education, cutting costs and waste in a Scottish hospital.
Contribution
A multi-cycle quality improvement approach successfully reduced overprescription of IV thiamine in AUD patients using low-cost education interventions.
Findings
Baseline data showed 60% of patients received excess Pabrinex doses, costing £35 per patient.
After two interventions, median excess doses per patient dropped from 13 to 4.5, a significant reduction.
Proportion of patients receiving correct initial prescriptions increased non-significantly from 30% to 51.3%.
Abstract
Background Patients with alcohol use disorders (AUD) are at increased risk of Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE) due to thiamine deficiency. At our centre all admitted patients with AUD are assessed for signs, symptoms and risk factors for WE. Such patients are prescribed oral or intravenous (IV) thiamine replacement in accordance with local guidelines; choice of dose and route of administration is determined based on the clinical features present at presentation. Failure to appropriately treat patients with WE may lead to potentially avoidable progression to Korsakoff syndrome. However, unnecessary use of IV formulations, high doses and extended durations of treatment can contribute to unnecessary administrations of IV thiamine, generating financial, environmental and workload costs. In the UK, IV thiamine is usually given in the form of compound vitamin B and C solution (Pabrinex). Aim…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAlcoholism and Thiamine Deficiency · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · Folate and B Vitamins Research
