Prediction of inventory sustainability during a drug shortage

Author:

Rhodes Nathaniel J.1,Gilbert Elise M.2,Skoglund Erik3,Esterly John S.2,Postelnick Michael J.4,McLaughlin Milena M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy Practice, Midwestern University, Chicago College of Pharmacy, Downers Grove, IL and Department of Pharmacy, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL

2. Department of Pharmacy Practice, Chicago State University College of Pharmacy, Chicago, IL and Department of Pharmacy, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL

3. Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI

4. Department of Pharmacy, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL

Abstract

Abstract Purpose A methodology for predicting how long the on-hand inventory of a given medication will last during a supply shortage is described; a practical example of application of the methodology is provided. Methods Single-site data on consumption of i.v. tobramycin over an eight-month evaluation period were collected using commercial software that tabulates barcode-assisted medication administration (BCMA) events; administered doses were standardized as 1200-mg “vial-equivalents” and summed over the review period. The total number of vial-equivalents consumed was divided by the number of “non-zero weeks of consumption” (i.e., weeks during which any tobramycin use occurred) to obtain a mean ± S.D. weekly consumption rate; this rate was multiplied by the total i.v. tobramycin on-hand supply (in vial-equivalents) to determine the mean number of potentially sustainable weeks of therapy in the event a shortage were to restrict the future supply of the drug. Results Overall, 99.6 vial-equivalents of i.v. tobramycin were used during the evaluation period. The mean ± S.D. number of vial-equivalents used per non-zero week of consumption was 3.11 ± 1.26. A manual count of pharmacy inventory revealed that 102.9 vial-equivalents were available at the time of analysis. The mean predicted duration of supply was 33 weeks (95% confidence interval, –126 to 192 weeks). Conclusion Available BCMA data on tobramycin consumption over eight months were used to calculate the mean number of weeks the on-hand supply of the drug could be expected to last during a persistent drug shortage.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Policy,Pharmacology

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