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Assessment of the stability of citrate-buffered flucloxacillin for injection when stored in two commercially available ambulatory elastomeric devices: INfusor LV (Baxter) and Accufuser (Woo Young Medical): a study compliant with the NHS Yellow Cover Document (YCD) requirements
  1. Michael Charles Allwood1,
  2. Donata Stonkute1,
  3. Andrew Wallace1,
  4. Alan-Shaun Wilkinson1,
  5. Tim Hills2,
  6. Conor Jamieson3
  7. on behalf of the BSAC Drug Stability Working Party
    1. 1 Biopharma Stability Testing Laboratory, BioCity Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
    2. 2 Pharmacy Department and OPAT Service, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK
    3. 3 Pharmacy Department, Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, Birmingham, UK
    1. Correspondence to Dr Conor Jamieson, Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust, Birmingham B18 7QH, UK; conor.jamieson{at}nhs.net

    Abstract

    Objectives To investigate the effect of pH and buffers on the degradation rate of flucloxacillin and to determine if flucloxacillin can be stabilised using a buffered diluent for up to 14 days when stored at 2°C–8°C including a 24-hour infusion period at 32°C in two elastomeric devices (Accufuser and INfusor LV) filled to 240 mL. Testing as per the NHS Pharmaceutical Quality Assurance Committee Yellow Cover Document (YCD) requirements.

    Methods A validated stability indicating high-performance liquid chromatography method was used for assessing the stability of flucloxacillin diluted in 0.3% w/v citrate-buffered saline pH 7.0 when stored at 2°C–8°C in two ambulatory devices (Accufuser and INfusor LV). Flucloxacillin at 10 and 50 mg/mL diluted in 0.3% w/v citrate-buffered saline pH 7.0 to a final volume of 240 mL and stored at 2°C–8°C, including 24 hours at 32°C, was tested from two batches in replicate (n=3) at five time points for up to 14 days according to the requirements of the YCD.

    Results Greater than 95% of the zero-time concentration of flucloxacillin at 10 and 50 mg/mL remained when stored at 2°C–8°C after 14 days including 24 hours at 32°C in both Accufuser and INfusor LV devices.

    Conclusions Flucloxacillin sodium stability was improved, and complied with UK national standards, by using a diluent of 0.3% w/v citrate-buffered saline pH 7 in both Accufuser and INfusor LV ambulatory devices when filled to 240 mL. The data support assigning a shelf-life of up to 14 days (13 days stored at 2°C–8°C and 24 hours at 32°C). Flucloxacillin may now be used appropriately as a continuous 24-hour infusion in outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy services, providing further opportunity to avoid or shorten patient hospital stays, as well as support ideal antimicrobial stewardship principles.

    • flucloxacillin
    • stability
    • elastomeric pump
    • ambulatory
    • antimicrobial stewardship
    • outpatient parenteral antimicrobial chemotherapy
    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

    This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, an indication of whether changes were made, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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