The American Journal of Medicine
Volume 118, Issue 8 , Pages 885-889, August 2005

Eliminating analgesic meperidine use with a supported formulary restriction

University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY.

Received 18 November 2004; accepted 28 January 2005.

Abstract 

Purpose

Meperidine is a commonly used analgesic despite unique disadvantages compared with other opioid analgesics. The objective of this study was to measure the effects of a meperidine formulary restriction on the prescribing of parenteral opioid analgesics.

Materials and methods

The study was performed at a single 750-bed tertiary care teaching hospital in Rochester, NY. The formulary restriction limited meperidine to use exclusively for rigors or procedural sedation and was supported by an educational initiative and a computerized order entry system. Independent computerized pharmacy records were used to capture all doses of parenteral morphine, meperidine, and hydromorphone administered to patients in the emergency department or on a medical or surgical inpatient floor during data-collection periods. Baseline data were collected during two 3-day periods before the formulary restriction; then comparison data were collected during three 3-day periods over 15 months after the formulary restriction.

Results

The number of administered doses of meperidine per day decreased from 37.5 (20.8% of parenteral opioid doses before the restriction) to 0.22 (0.1% of parenteral opioid doses, P = .001). The total number of opioid doses and morphine doses given did not change, whereas the number of hydromorphone doses increased significantly postrestriction, from 16.0 doses per day (8.9% of total) to 59.7 doses per day (29.5%) (P = .009).

Conclusion

Meperidine formulary restriction, supported by an educational program and computerized order entry, effectively eliminated analgesic meperidine use. Hydromorphone use increased proportionately to offset the decreased use of meperidine.

Keywords:  Meperidine , Hydromorphone , Morphine , Formularies , Hospital

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 The General Medicine Unit of the Department of Medicine at the University of Rochester funded the statistical analysis.

PII: S0002-9343(05)00165-8

doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2005.01.061

The American Journal of Medicine
Volume 118, Issue 8 , Pages 885-889, August 2005