# Getting Pabrinex Right: A Multi-cycle Quality Improvement Study Reducing Waste in Thiamine Prescribing at a Scottish District General Hospital

**Authors:** Thomas W Noteman, Damien McCoy

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.96322 · 2025-11-07

## 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.

## Key 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

This quality improvement (QI) project aims to quantify and reduce unnecessary prescription of IV Pabrinex in patients with AUD admitted to a district general hospital using a multi-cycle plan-do-study-act (PDSA) methodology.

Materials and methods

This retrospective study involved 106 patients admitted over a four-month period. Two education-based prescriber-targeted interventions were performed. Data collection was performed at baseline and after each intervention. Recommended thiamine dose was calculated by reviewing patients’ admission documentation for presenting signs, symptoms and demographics. These data were then cross-referenced with local guidelines on the management of patients admitted with AUD to determine the recommended thiamine dosing regimen. The total number of IV Pabrinex doses recommended by guidelines was compared to the actual number prescribed for each patient to determine potentially unnecessary “excess” doses. Primary outcome measures recorded were the number of excess doses prescribed and proportion of patients receiving the correct initial dose.

Results

Baseline data showed 60% patients had received excess doses of Pabrinex, with a median of 13 excess doses per patient. This represented an excess cost of £35 per patient for medication alone. Following first and second interventions, median excess doses per patient in subsequent cycles fell to seven and then to 4.5, a significant reduction from baseline (p=0.0087). Proportion of patients receiving correct initial prescription showed a non-significant rise from 30% to 51.3% (p=0.12).

Conclusions

A targeted four-month multi-cycle QI project was carried out to quantify and reduce thiamine overprescription among AUD patients in a Scottish district general hospital. Interventions successfully reduced excess Pabrinex doses given per patient. This study highlights the potential for overprescription in the context of thiamine replacement and findings suggest that low-cost prescriber education strategies can be used to improve practice in this setting. Limitations included the single-centre design and short follow-up period, which limit generalisability. Clinical outcome measures were not recorded here but would be important to consider in future work. Caution should be exercised when aiming to reduce thiamine overprescription to mitigate the risk of underdosing patients who warrant treatment. Following completion of this project, a revised guideline has been implemented for this health board with simplified dosing recommendations, which may yield further improvements in practice.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** thiamine (PubChem CID 1130)
- **Diseases:** Wernicke's encephalopathy (MONDO:0007020)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** WE (MESH:D014899), thiamine deficiency (MESH:D013832), AUD (MESH:D000437), Korsakoff syndrome (MESH:D020915)
- **Chemicals:** Thiamine (MESH:D013831), Pabrinex (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12594507/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12594507