Implementation of a Gastrografin Order Set for Small Bowel Obstruction Across a Health System: A Cohort Study

Author:

McCartt Jason1ORCID,Cleveland Elaine1,Duet Mary2,Paton Lauren1,Thompson Kyle1,Matthews Brent1,Cunningham Kyle1,Ross Samuel W.1,Reinke Caroline E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC, USA

2. Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA

Abstract

Background The use of Gastrografin (GG) in the management of adhesive small bowel obstruction (SBO) has been shown to decrease the length of stay and operative intervention. Methods This retrospective cohort study examined patients with an SBO diagnosis prior to implementation (PRE, January 2017-January 2019) and following implementation (POST, January 2019-May 2021) of a GG challenge order set made available across 9 hospitals within a health care system. Primary outcomes were utilization of the order set across facilities and over time. Secondary outcomes included time to surgery for operative patients, rate of surgery, nonoperative length of stay, and 30-day readmission. Standard descriptive, univariate, and multivariable regression analyses were performed. Results PRE cohort had 1746 patients and POST had 1889. The utilization of GG increased from 14% to 49.5% following implementation. Significant variability existed within the hospital system with utilization at each individual hospital from 11.5% to 60%. There was an increase in surgical intervention (13.9% vs 16.4%, P = .04) and decrease in nonoperative LOS (65.6 vs 59.9 hours, P < .001) following implementation. For POST patients, multivariable linear regression showed significant reduction in nonoperative length of stay (−23.1 hours, P < .001) but no significant difference in time to surgery (−19.6 hours, P = .08). Discussion The availability of a standardized order set for SBO can result in increased Gastrografin administration across hospital settings. The implementation of a Gastrografin order set was associated with decreased length of stay in nonoperative patients.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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