Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2763797 Journal of Clinical Anesthesia 2007 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

Study ObjectiveTo characterize the evolution of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) prophylactic drug use.DesignRetrospective data extraction and analysis of electronic anesthesia records.SettingAnesthesia department of an urban academic medical center.Measurements144,134 anesthetics given by 57 attending anesthesiologists were studied. Administered doses of droperidol, ondansetron, dexamethasone, and metoclopramide were tabulated for each year for each practitioner.Main ResultsOndansetron use in the periods before and after the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warning concerning droperidol was 8% and 35%, respectively. Use of PONV prophylaxis increased for all included patient and anesthetic factors. Among those who used droperidol before the revised FDA warning, 61% stopped using it altogether. Afterwards, 75% (27-100%) of droperidol use was in combination with another agent.ConclusionsWe found a significant and sustained decrease in droperidol use after the FDA-mandated labeling revision. We also found a significant increase in ondansetron use—an increase that exceeded the amount needed to substitute for the decreased droperidol use. The changes may be related to multiple factors, including the FDA warning, a trend toward more PONV prophylaxis, and the increasing predominance of serotonin antagonists for this indication.

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