Mb. Bobek et al., Utilization patterns, relative costs, and length of stay following adoption of MICU sedation guidelines, FORMULARY, 36(9), 2001, pp. 664
Objective: To determine patterns and frequency of sedative, analgesic, and
neuromuscular blocker (NMB) use in a medical intensive care unit (MICU); to
describe drug costs, and to describe MICU length of stay and self-extubati
on related to medication use following implementation of sedation guideline
s. Design: Prospective cohort study. Subjects., One hundred patients requir
ing mechanical ventilation consecutively admitted to an MICU. Measurement.
The following data were concurrently collected from medical records: demogr
aphic characteristics; clinical variables; sedative, analgesic, and NMB use
; MICU length of stay; and self-extubation events. Results: The 85 patients
who received a study medication were given a mean of 2.5 (+/-1.5) medicati
ons each. Morphine was the most commonly used analgesic (n = 39), primarily
as an as-needed bolus. Fentanyl exceeded morphine in acquisition cost and
days of use even at equipotent doses. Lorazepam was the most commonly used
(n = 71) and least expensive sedative. Only 12 patients received an NMB. Le
ngth. of stay was associated with the number of drug classes received (p =
0.0002) but not with the type of drug used. Fifty-nine patients received tw
o or more drugs, usually a benzodiazepine and an analgesic. Conclusions. Be
nzodiazepines were used more often than analgesics in the MICU. Most patien
ts received lorazepam and morphine on an as-needed basis, as specified by t
he guidelines, at less cost than with continuous infusion. There was no evi
dence that as-needed use of morphine or lorazepam increased MICU length of
stay or self-extubation.