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Published in: Advances in Therapy 9/2021

Open Access 01-09-2021 | Rocuronium | Original Research

Neuromuscular Blockade and Reversal Agent Practice Variability in the US Inpatient Surgical Settings

Authors: Lori D. Bash, Vladimir Turzhitsky, Wynona Black, Richard D. Urman

Published in: Advances in Therapy | Issue 9/2021

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Abstract

Introduction

The management of neuromuscular blockade (NMB) has evolved over time and remains a critical component of general anesthesia. However, NMB use varies by patient and procedural characteristics, clinical practices, protocols, and drug access. National utilization patterns are unknown. We describe changes in NMB and NMB reversal agent administration in surgical inpatients since the US introduction of sugammadex in December 2015.

Methods

In a retrospective observational study of inpatients involving NMB with rocuronium or vecuronium in the Premier Healthcare Database, we estimate associations between factors related to choice of (1) active NMB reversal versus spontaneous recovery and (2) sugammadex versus neostigmine as the reversal agent.

Results

Among 4.3 million adult inpatient encounters involving rocuronium or vecuronium, the most widely administered NMB agent was rocuronium alone (86%). Over time, gradual declines in both neostigmine use and spontaneous reversal were observed (64% and 36% in 2014 to 38% and 28%, respectively in the first half of 2019). Several factors were independently associated with use of active versus spontaneous NMB recovery including years since 2016, patient (age, race, comorbidities), and procedure (admission and surgery type) characteristics. Among those actively reversed, these and other factors were independently associated with choice of reversal agent administered, including size and teaching affiliation of hospital. While both impacted choices in treatment, the direction and magnitude of effect of patient comorbidities and procedure type varied in their impact on choice of mode (pharmacologic vs. spontaneous) and agent (neostigmine vs. sugammadex) of NMB reversal independent of other factors and each other. Sites which adopted sugammadex earlier were more likely to choose sugammadex over neostigmine compared with later adopters independent of other factors.

Conclusions

Among US adult inpatients administered NMBs, we observed complex relationships between patient, site, procedural characteristics, and NMB management choices as NMBA choice and active reversal options among inpatient cases changed over time.
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Metadata
Title
Neuromuscular Blockade and Reversal Agent Practice Variability in the US Inpatient Surgical Settings
Authors
Lori D. Bash
Vladimir Turzhitsky
Wynona Black
Richard D. Urman
Publication date
01-09-2021
Publisher
Springer Healthcare
Published in
Advances in Therapy / Issue 9/2021
Print ISSN: 0741-238X
Electronic ISSN: 1865-8652
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-021-01835-2

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