Intravenous Chemotherapy Compounding Errors in a Follow-Up Pan-Canadian Observational Study

Author:

Gilbert Rachel E.1,Kozak Melissa C.1,Dobish Roxanne B.1,Bourrier Venetia C.1,Koke Paul M.1,Kukreti Vishal1,Logan Heather A.1,Easty Anthony C.1,Trbovich Patricia L.1

Affiliation:

1. Independent consultant; The TECHNA Institute; Princess Margaret Cancer Centre; Canadian Association of Provincial Cancer Agencies; University of Toronto; North York General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario; Alberta Health Services, Edmonton, Alberta; CancerCare Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba; and BC Cancer Agency, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

Purpose: Intravenous (IV) compounding safety has garnered recent attention as a result of high-profile incidents, awareness efforts from the safety community, and increasingly stringent practice standards. New research with more-sensitive error detection techniques continues to reinforce that error rates with manual IV compounding are unacceptably high. In 2014, our team published an observational study that described three types of previously unrecognized and potentially catastrophic latent chemotherapy preparation errors in Canadian oncology pharmacies that would otherwise be undetectable. We expand on this research and explore whether additional potential human failures are yet to be addressed by practice standards. Methods: Field observations were conducted in four cancer center pharmacies in four Canadian provinces from January 2013 to February 2015. Human factors specialists observed and interviewed pharmacy managers, oncology pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, and pharmacy assistants as they carried out their work. Emphasis was on latent errors (potential human failures) that could lead to outcomes such as wrong drug, dose, or diluent. Results: Given the relatively short observational period, no active failures or actual errors were observed. However, 11 latent errors in chemotherapy compounding were identified. In terms of severity, all 11 errors create the potential for a patient to receive the wrong drug or dose, which in the context of cancer care, could lead to death or permanent loss of function. Three of the 11 practices were observed in our previous study, but eight were new. Applicable Canadian and international standards and guidelines do not explicitly address many of the potentially error-prone practices observed. Conclusion: We observed a significant degree of risk for error in manual mixing practice. These latent errors may exist in other regions where manual compounding of IV chemotherapy takes place. Continued efforts to advance standards, guidelines, technological innovation, and chemical quality testing are needed.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Health Policy,Oncology(nursing),Oncology

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