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BEST PRACTICES FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION AND USE OF THE APOTECACHEMO TECHNOLOGY AGREED BY THE GERMAN HOSPITAL PHARMACY USER GROUP

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European Statement

Production and Compounding

Author(s)

Bastian Mende, Irene Krämer, Jannik Almasi, Christoph Klaas, Bernhard Rainer Kujau, Swantje Eisend, Herwig Heindl, Jacopo Raffaelli, Jochen Schnurrer

Why was it done?

During a two-day meeting in September 2018, the German community of APOTECAchemo users and technology experts developed Best Practices for the optimal implementation and subsequent application of APOTECAchemo technology in pharmacy based aseptic preparation of ready-to-administer antineoplastic medicinal products.

What was done?

Robotic systems, designed for the aseptic preparation of ready-to-administer parenterals in hospital pharmacies, should facilitate a fully integrated workflow and a process organization interconnecting the automated and manual preparation. Despite some differences between the hospital pharmacies, the definition of standards and Best Practices for the automated compounding of cytotoxic preparations facilitates the implementation of the technology in different hospital pharmacies.

How was it done?

Prior to the meeting of the user group a survey with 24 statements for the implementation and use of the APOTECAchemo technology was sent to the German APOTECAchemo users. The 24 Best Practices were assigned to 4 categories: Workflow & Organization, Production, Roles & Responsibilities and Quality & Process Control. The survey participants evaluated the proposed Best Practices in view of the practicability in German hospital pharmacies. During the meeting, results of the survey were consented or adapted and additional best practices were defined.

What has been achieved?

The German user group defined the Best practices for the implementation and use of APOTECAchemo technology. The most relevant result for each of the four categories is:
• Workflow and Organisation: The automated preparation should reduce the daily workload of manual preparation and minimize potential errors.
• Production: Optimum interconnection between technicians and the robot will increase the efficiency.
• Role and responsibilities: Pharmacists are responsible for the design of the automated production workflow, while technicians become the manager of the automated compounding process
• Quality & Process Control: Microbiological controls must be performed during manual and automated production

What next?

The best practices defined by the German APOTECAchemo Community support experienced users and are especially useful for hospital pharmacies newly implementing the technology.

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