Vancomycin Infusion Rate During Hemodialysis

Nurses Safety

Updated:   Published

Please help me with this situation.

I work at a franchise Hemodialysis center and we have a large turnover of staff as well as many technicians. Because of this, I think some of the nursing information is inadequate.

Frequently we administer Vancomycin during the last portion of the therapy.

The instructions on the prescription state to run this 1 gram of Vancomycin over one hour. I have some senior nursing staff pressuring me to run this in 45 minutes or less. When I disagree with them, they become angry, defensive and belittle me. They tell me that because the Vancomycin is being run through either a central line or a fistula, we aren't worried about "Burning the vessel" like you would with a peripheral line.

I was always taught that it also had to do with the activation of histamine causing "Red Man Syndrome".

We have a local infusion pharmacy here and they stated that we absolutely should not run the Vancomycin in less than 60 minutes.

Help me please!

Let them be upset all they want. You have to make decisions based upon accepted knowledge, not peer pressure.

Yes, vanco is a vesicant but that is not the sole issue of concern.

Your pharmacy has already confirmed your understanding about the correct rate.

From the package insert/drug info retained by the FDA:

Quote

Vancomycin should be administered over a period of not less than 60 minutes to avoid rapid-infusion-related reactions.

Source: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2017/050671s024lbl.pdf

Also:

Quote

RMS most frequently occurs with IV vancomycin but may rarely occur from oral or intraperitoneal vancomycin.[4][5][6] It usually is related to a rapid infusion rate of vancomycin (1 gram in less than 1 hour). Current treatment recommendations are to administer vancomycin at a rate no faster than 1 gram/hour or 10 mg/min.

Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK482506/

When they pressure you tell them that you can't find anything to substantiate their idea and you are going to administer the medication according to the published instructions.

Specializes in ER.

You have to follow the pharmacy recommendations, no matter what another coworker says.

Just my 2 cents, if you don't follow the proper instructions and something goes wrong , it will your license on the line. Nothing will happen to them.

Specializes in ICU, ER, Home Health, Corrections, School Nurse.

Show them the documentation. I've had patients develop red man syndrome. It ain't fun, and then you have to stop the infusion completely, which will certainly prolong the process.

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