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BACKGROUND: Harris County Hospital District, Houston, TX, is a publicly funded hospital system that provides care to residents of Harris County with a need-based payment system. The Harris County Hospital District pharmacy department, with a drug budget of more than $75 million in fiscal year 2010, utilizes a closed formulary system that is managed by the Formulary Management and Pharmacoeconomics Service, along with the medical staff. This service is comprised of clinical pharmacists whose goal is to provide a comprehensive, safe, and cost-effective formulary. OBJECTIVE: To describe the unique formulary management process at a county hospital system and what makes this process cost-effective, which may benefit pharmacy departments in institutions serving an indigent patient population. SUMMARY: The Harris County Hospital District drug formulary is overseen by the Pharmacy & Therapeutics committee, which is supported by 5 therapeutic subcommittees, including antimicrobials, cardiovascular, general formulary, central nervous system, and oncology. The Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee consists of a medical staff committee that is supported by clinical pharmacists, who serve as the facilitators of these 5 subcommittees. Their responsibilities include the provision of drug information for formulary decisions, providing parameters to govern the use of certain medications, communicating changes to the formulary, conducting class reviews and medication utilization evaluations, coordinating annual pharmaceutical bids, reviewing and writing medication use policies and procedures, facilitating the use of cost-effective medications, and monitoring the use of medications in the hospital system. CONCLUSION: The processes incorporated by Harris County Hospital District in its formulary management are cost-effective and may be beneficial to other pharmacy departments, especially those institutions that serve an indigent patient population and are interested in cost-effective management strategies.
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PURPOSE: The pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, efficacy, safety, dosage and administration, and place in therapy of clevidipine are reviewed. SUMMARY: Clevidipine is a new lipophilic, short-acting, third-generation dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker (CCB) approved for use in the management of acute hypertension when oral agents are not feasible. It exerts its hemodynamic effects through selective arterial vasodilation without effects on the venous circulation. Clevidipine has a half-life of approximately two minutes after i.v. administration, resulting in very rapid onset and offset of antihypertensive action. Unlike many current i.v. antihypertensive agents that are metabolized by the kidneys or liver, clevidipine is metabolized in the blood and tissues and does not accumulate in the body. Clevidipine does not appear to inhibit or induce cytochrome P-450 isoenzymes. Several Phase III clinical trials have reported the clinical efficacy and safety of clevidipine in patients with severe hypertension and in cardiac surgical patients with perioperative hypertension. The most frequent adverse events reported in clinical trials of clevidipine were headache, nausea, and vomiting. Risk of rebound hypertension, especially in patients not transitioned from clevidipine to oral antihypertensive therapy after prolonged infusions, should be monitored for at least eight hours after the drug is discontinued. CONCLUSION: Clevidipine, a novel third-generation dihydropyridine CCB, has demonstrated efficacy and safety in patients with acute hypertension and preoperative, perioperative, and postoperative hypertension. While its short duration of action and short half-life are appropriate for use in acute settings, more information on its safety is needed to assess its appropriate use in therapy.