Abstract

BackgroundThere is no globally accepted definition for dosing error in adult or pediatric practice. The definition of pediatric dosing error varies greatly in the literature. The objective of this study was to develop a framework, informed by a set of principles, for a clinician-based definition of drug dosing errors in critically ill children, and to identify the range that practitioners agree is a dosing error for different drug classes and clinical scenarios.MethodsWe conducted a nationwide three staged modified Delphi from May to December 2019. Expert clinicians included Canadian pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) physicians, pharmacists and nurses, with a least 5 years’ experience. Outcomes were underlying principles of drug dosing, and error thresholds, as defined by proportion above and below reference range, for common PICU medications and clinical scenarios.ResultsForty-four participants met eligibility, and response rates were 95, 86 and 84% for all three rounds respectively. Consensus was achieved for 13 of 15 principles, and 23 of 30 error thresholds. An over-dosed drug that is intercepted, an under-dose of a possibly life-saving medication, dosing 50% above or below target range and not adjusting for a drug interaction were agreed principles of dosing error. Altough there remained much uncertainty in defining dosing error, expert clinicians agreed that, for most medication categories and clinical scenarios, dosing over or below 10% of reference range was considered an error threshold.ConclusionDosing principles and threshold are complex in pediatric critical care, and expert clinicians were uncertain about whether many scenarios were considered in error. For most intermittent medications, dosing over 10% below or above reference range was considered a dosing error, although this was largely influenced by clinical context and drug properties. This consensus driven error threshold will help guide routine clinical dosing practice, standardized reporting and drug quality improvement in pediatric critical care.

Highlights

  • There is no globally accepted definition for dosing error in adult or pediatric practice

  • We developed a detailed survey eliciting the opinions of pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) healthcare providers on 1) the underlying principles that guide dosing and influence the consideration of dosing error, and 2) dosing thresholds for dosing errors, in pediatric critical care

  • This study used a modified Delphi methodology to establish a framework of principles and dosing error thresholds for drugs commonly given in the PICU under common clinical scenarios

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Summary

Introduction

There is no globally accepted definition for dosing error in adult or pediatric practice. The objective of this study was to develop a framework, informed by a set of principles, for a clinician-based definition of drug dosing errors in critically ill children, and to identify the range that practitioners agree is a dosing error for different drug classes and clinical scenarios. Critical care practitioners may prescribe acceptable doses outside a reference range, based on drug properties, organ dysfunction, and the patients’ clinical status. The specific objectives of this study were 1) to develop a framework, informed by a set of principles, for a clinician-based definition of drug dosing errors in critically ill children, and 2) to identify the range, outside the standard reference range, that practitioners agree is a dosing error for different drug classes and clinical scenarios

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