Purpose: The purpose of this study was to (1) determine whether academic medical centers implemented area under the concentration-time curve (AUC)-based monitoring for vancomycin and (2) characterize perceived barriers to implementation and challenges experienced during the implementation process.
Methods: A multicenter, cross-sectional electronic survey was distributed to pharmacy representatives from 124 academic medical centers within the Vizient University Health System Consortium Pharmacy Network.
Results: Seventy-eight institutions completed the survey, representing a 62.9% response rate. Most institutions were approximately 500-1,000 beds (68/78, 87.2%), and pharmacists were primarily responsible for vancomycin therapeutic drug monitoring (66/78, 84.6%) using pharmacist-driven protocols (57/78, 73.1%). Less than one fourth (18/78, 23.1%) of responding academic medical centers performed AUC-based vancomycin monitoring, and the majority (12/18, 66.7%) used 2-point pharmacokinetics, with a smaller fraction using either Bayesian software or population-based pharmacokinetics. Of the responding institutions that only perform trough-based therapeutic drug monitoring (60/78, 76.9%), most (53/60, 88.3%) did not plan to or were unsure about transitioning to AUC-based monitoring within the next year. Both the most common challenge encountered (13/18, 72.2%) for institutions performing AUC-based monitoring and the most common barrier (44/60, 73.3%) to implementation of this monitoring strategy were pharmacist and/or provider unfamiliarity.
Conclusion: The majority of surveyed academic medical centers have not yet implemented AUC-based vancomycin monitoring, and most institutions did not plan to adopt or were unsure about adopting this monitoring strategy within the next year.
Keywords: area under the curve; pharmacodynamics; pharmacokinetics; survey; therapeutic drug monitoring; vancomycin.
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