NYMC Faculty Publications
Improving Thiamine Prescribing in Alcohol Use Disorder Using Electronic Decision Support in a Large Urban Academic Medical Center: A Pre-Post Intervention Study
Author Type(s)
Faculty
DOI
10.1016/j.josat.2024.209485
Journal Title
Journal of Substance Use and Addiction Treatment
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2024
Department
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Keywords
Alcohol use disorder, Thiamine, Wernicke encephalopathy
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
Abstract
Introduction: Thiamine is the only therapy for prevention and treatment of Wernicke Encephalopathy among patients with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD). Despite this fact, up to 75 % of inpatients with AUD are not prescribed thiamine during hospitalization. Even fewer patients are prescribed high-dose thiamine which many experts recommend should be standard of care. Previous attempts to improve thiamine prescribing for inpatients have had limited success. Methods: We conducted an evaluation of thiamine prescribing in the year before and year after an intervention to increase high-dose thiamine prescribing. Pre-post study analysis occurred on two distinct study cohorts: those with alcohol-related diagnoses and those with elevated alcohol levels. The intervention was new electronic health record-based decision support which encouraged high-dose thiamine when any thiamine order was sought. No educational support was provided. The primary outcome was prescription of high-dose thiamine before versus after intervention. Of those with alcohol-related diagnoses, the monthly percentage of thiamine treatment courses including high-dose thiamine were graphed on a control chart. Results: We examined 5307 admissions with alcohol-related diagnoses (2285 pre- and 3022 post-intervention) and 698 admissions with elevated alcohol levels (319 pre- and 379 post-intervention). Among admissions with alcohol-related diagnoses, the intervention was associated with a higher proportion of admissions receiving high-dose thiamine prescriptions in the first 24 h (4.7 % vs. 1.1 %, adjusted odds ratio 4.50, CI 2.93 to 6.89, p < 0.001). A similar difference in high-dose thiamine was seen post-intervention among admissions with elevated alcohol levels (14.3 % vs. 2.5 %, adjusted odds ratio 6.43, CI 3.05 to 13.53, p < 0.001). The control chart among those with an alcohol-related diagnosis demonstrated special cause variation: the median percentage of thiamine treatment courses including high-dose thiamine improved from 8.2 % to 13.0 %. Conclusions: Electronic decision support without educational interventions increased the use of high-dose thiamine among patients with alcohol-related diagnoses and with elevated alcohol levels during hospitalization. This increase occurred immediately in the month after the intervention and was sustained in the year-long study period after.
Recommended Citation
Baron, S., Wai, J., Aloezos, C., Cregin, R., Ceresnak, J., Dekhtyar, J., & Southern, W. (2024). Improving Thiamine Prescribing in Alcohol Use Disorder Using Electronic Decision Support in a Large Urban Academic Medical Center: A Pre-Post Intervention Study. Journal of Substance Use and Addiction Treatment, 166. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.josat.2024.209485
