- Share
Effects of manual and syringe pump induction of total intravenous anaesthesia on propofol waste: a single-centre retrospective analysis
Pollution, environmental and human health | Clinical impacts and solutions
British Journal of Anaesthesia December 2024
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
18-11-2024 to 18-11-2025
Available on-demand until 18th November 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Background
Propofol accounts for a substantial proportion of medication waste. Evidence-based waste reduction methods are scarce.
Methods
In a retrospective analysis of 331 procedures, the total propofol waste per surgery was compared between manual and syringe pump induction of anaesthesia during total intravenous anaesthesia (TIVA), with a syringe pump used to maintain TIVA after induction. The secondary endpoint was the amount of propofol administered. Subgroup analyses examined the influence of biological sex, age, weight or BMI, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status, substance use, and anaesthesia duration on propofol waste.
Results
Syringe pump induction was associated with 32.8% less waste of propofol (P<0.001); this effect was most pronounced in procedures lasting 20–60 min (up to 46.9% less in procedures lasting 20–40 min, P<0.001) and 80–120 min (up to 48.8% less in procedures lasting 100–120 min, P=0.003). The amount of waste was not affected by biological sex, age, weight, BMI, or ASA physical status. Syringe pump induction was consistently associated with less waste, except in patients with obesity. Patients with active substance use had 27.6% more waste with manual induction (P=0.031) but not with syringe pump induction. In patients with and without active substance use, syringe pump induction resulted in less waste (substance use: 48.7% less, P=0.0015; without substance use: 22.7% less, P=0.0045).
Conclusions
Syringe pump induction reduced propofol waste during TIVA, regardless of patient characteristics. Manual induction using a separate syringe should be reconsidered from an environmental and economic viewpoint.
Contact details
Email address
Telephone number
+44 20 7424 4200

125 London Wall
London
EC2Y 5AS