A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein

Abstract Objective: The objective of this study was to compare the environmental contamination generated during the preparation of cytostatic agents using three different methods through simulations using fluorescein, and the time required for preparation of each method. Method: A comparative study of the processing of fluorescein mixtures using three types of closed systems was conducted at the centralized unit for hazardous drugs of the Pharmacy Department of a General Teaching Hospital. Environmental contamination was detected in critical points of connection, and in splashes produced at any other points. The main variable was qualitative detection of contamination through ultraviolet light when three methods were compared (method A: ChemoClave®, method B: SmartSite®valve and Texium®connector, method C: PhaSealTMwith BD luer extension). A final number of 60 mixtures were prepared to detect differences of at least 5%. Results: Qualitative contamination at the critical points during preparation, was seen in groups A and B for every mixture that was processed. No contamination at all in critical points was seen in any of the mixtures prepared using PhaSealTM. Statistically significant differences were found between arms A and C (p < 0.001) and arms B and C (p < 0.001); no differences were found between arms A and B. Conclusions: The combination of PhaSealTMsystem in conjunction with the BD luer extension for administering hazardous drugs from a tree modality system has been shown to be the system with the lowest level of contamination during processing without increasing the time required for preparation of the mixture.

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Main Authors: González-Haba-Peña,Eva, Manrique-Rodríguez,Silvia, Herranz-Alonso,Ana María, Iglesias-Peinado,Irene, Sanjurjo-Sáez,María
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Grupo Aula Médica 2018
Online Access:http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1130-63432018000600005
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spelling oai:scielo:S1130-634320180006000052020-11-05A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluoresceinGonzález-Haba-Peña,EvaManrique-Rodríguez,SilviaHerranz-Alonso,Ana MaríaIglesias-Peinado,IreneSanjurjo-Sáez,María Hazardous substances Equipment and supplies Antineoplastic agents Drug compounding Drug contamination Abstract Objective: The objective of this study was to compare the environmental contamination generated during the preparation of cytostatic agents using three different methods through simulations using fluorescein, and the time required for preparation of each method. Method: A comparative study of the processing of fluorescein mixtures using three types of closed systems was conducted at the centralized unit for hazardous drugs of the Pharmacy Department of a General Teaching Hospital. Environmental contamination was detected in critical points of connection, and in splashes produced at any other points. The main variable was qualitative detection of contamination through ultraviolet light when three methods were compared (method A: ChemoClave®, method B: SmartSite®valve and Texium®connector, method C: PhaSealTMwith BD luer extension). A final number of 60 mixtures were prepared to detect differences of at least 5%. Results: Qualitative contamination at the critical points during preparation, was seen in groups A and B for every mixture that was processed. No contamination at all in critical points was seen in any of the mixtures prepared using PhaSealTM. Statistically significant differences were found between arms A and C (p < 0.001) and arms B and C (p < 0.001); no differences were found between arms A and B. Conclusions: The combination of PhaSealTMsystem in conjunction with the BD luer extension for administering hazardous drugs from a tree modality system has been shown to be the system with the lowest level of contamination during processing without increasing the time required for preparation of the mixture.Grupo Aula MédicaFarmacia Hospitalaria v.42 n.6 20182018-12-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1130-63432018000600005en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country España
countrycode ES
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region Europa del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author González-Haba-Peña,Eva
Manrique-Rodríguez,Silvia
Herranz-Alonso,Ana María
Iglesias-Peinado,Irene
Sanjurjo-Sáez,María
spellingShingle González-Haba-Peña,Eva
Manrique-Rodríguez,Silvia
Herranz-Alonso,Ana María
Iglesias-Peinado,Irene
Sanjurjo-Sáez,María
A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein
author_facet González-Haba-Peña,Eva
Manrique-Rodríguez,Silvia
Herranz-Alonso,Ana María
Iglesias-Peinado,Irene
Sanjurjo-Sáez,María
author_sort González-Haba-Peña,Eva
title A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein
title_short A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein
title_full A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein
title_fullStr A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein
title_sort comparative study of contamination in three closed systems for the preparation of hazardous drugs through simulations with fluorescein
description Abstract Objective: The objective of this study was to compare the environmental contamination generated during the preparation of cytostatic agents using three different methods through simulations using fluorescein, and the time required for preparation of each method. Method: A comparative study of the processing of fluorescein mixtures using three types of closed systems was conducted at the centralized unit for hazardous drugs of the Pharmacy Department of a General Teaching Hospital. Environmental contamination was detected in critical points of connection, and in splashes produced at any other points. The main variable was qualitative detection of contamination through ultraviolet light when three methods were compared (method A: ChemoClave®, method B: SmartSite®valve and Texium®connector, method C: PhaSealTMwith BD luer extension). A final number of 60 mixtures were prepared to detect differences of at least 5%. Results: Qualitative contamination at the critical points during preparation, was seen in groups A and B for every mixture that was processed. No contamination at all in critical points was seen in any of the mixtures prepared using PhaSealTM. Statistically significant differences were found between arms A and C (p < 0.001) and arms B and C (p < 0.001); no differences were found between arms A and B. Conclusions: The combination of PhaSealTMsystem in conjunction with the BD luer extension for administering hazardous drugs from a tree modality system has been shown to be the system with the lowest level of contamination during processing without increasing the time required for preparation of the mixture.
publisher Grupo Aula Médica
publishDate 2018
url http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1130-63432018000600005
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