DICP : the annals of pharmacotherapy
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This study determined the total preparation time, cost, and contamination rate associated with preparing 50-mL admixtures of ranitidine 50 mg from each of the following commercial source vials: 50 mg/2 mL unit-dose vial (treatment A), 50 mg/2 mL 10 mL multidose vial (treatment B), and 50 mg/2 mL 40 mL multidose vial (treatment C). The study consisted of two separate phases: phase I extemporaneous compounding and phase II batch manufacturing. Twelve technicians prepared ten admixtures from each source vial during each phase. ⋯ Multidose vials saved approximately $197 per 200 admixtures. Drug and personnel costs were reduced when batch manufacturing with 40-mL multidose vials was compared with extemporaneous compounding with unit-dose vials. Our study showed that multidose vials decreased the total preparation time and cost for making ranitidine admixtures during both extemporaneous compounding and batch manufacturing by reducing setup time, preparation time, and drug procurement cost.
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Anistreplase, a modified congener of streptokinase, is a recently approved thrombolytic agent used in the treatment of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Clinical studies have demonstrated anistreplase to be equally efficacious as intracoronary streptokinase when given within four hours of the onset of chest pain. Thirty units, given as a single bolus intravenous injection, result in reperfusion rates of approximately 60-70 percent. ⋯ Anistreplase has two distinct advantages over both streptokinase and alteplase: (1) it can be administered as a single bolus intravenous injection and (2) it has a longer half-life which may result in decreased reocclusion rates. Anistreplase therapy is associated with reductions in both short- and long-term mortality and has been shown to preserve left ventricular function. A large, long-term, comparative clinical trial (Third International Study of Infarct Survival or ISIS-III) investigating morbidity and mortality rates with streptokinase, alteplase, and anistreplase is ongoing, as is a direct comparative study against alteplase alone (TEAM-3, Multicenter Thrombolytic Trials of Eminase in Acute Myocardial Infarction).