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Eastern States Conference for Pharmacy Residents and Preceptors
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Friday, May 15
 

7:00am EDT

ASHP Accreditation Services Town Hall
Friday May 15, 2026 7:00am - 8:00am EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 7:00am - 8:00am EDT
Atrium

8:00am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT

Moderators
CL

Carol Luong

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Health
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 7

8:00am EDT

Changes in thyroid stimulating hormone levels and levothyroxine dosage for patients prescribed with injectable weight loss medications
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Title: 
Changes in thyroid stimulating hormone levels and levothyroxine dosage for patients prescribed with injectable weight loss medications

Authors: 
Sammie Zou, Pharm D; Gabriela Smicherko, Pharm D; Holland Hood, Pharm D
Wilkes-Barre Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA

Learning Objective:
By the end of this presentation, participants will be able to evaluate the importance of monitoring thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels and address potential need for levothyroxine dose adjustment for patients prescribed with injectable weight loss medications.

Objective: 
The objective of this study is to monitor change in weight and TSH levels to assess the need for dose adjustment of levothyroxine in patients taking injectable weight loss medications.

Self Assessment Question:
True or False: TSH monitoring may be beneficial in patients taking both levothyroxine and injectable weight loss medication.

Methods:
In this retrospective chart-review, quality-improvement project data was obtained from the Computerized Patient Record System (CPRS) for patients with obesity and receiving injectable weight loss medication (semaglutide or tirzepatide) along with receiving levothyroxine for hypothyroidism from September 2022 to September 2025. Patients excluded were those with a history of thyroid cancer, receiving amiodarone, unable to tolerate injectable weight loss medications, utilizing injectable weight loss medication with only minimal weight loss effect (less than five percent reduction in body weight), or had no baseline TSH levels within at least six months while receiving levothyroxine. The primary outcome was the change in dose of levothyroxine since the initiation of an injectable weight loss medication, and the secondary outcomes were changes in weight and changes in TSH levels at baseline, three months, six months, and years one through three.
 
Results: 
A total of 170 charts were reviewed, and 57 patients met inclusion criteria and were included in the analysis. The primary outcome showed that 71.9% of patients had no changes made in their levothyroxine dose, 24.6% of patients had a decrease in levothyroxine dose, and 3.5% of patients had an increase in levothyroxine dose. Patients with a higher degree of weight loss did experience a reduction in their levothyroxine dose, and the average TSH levels have decreased with initiation of a weight loss injectable before stabilizing after dose adjustments of levothyroxine were made.

Conclusion: 
Most patients did not have levothyroxine dose adjustments following initiation of weight loss injectable. However, patients with greater weight loss had a greater likelihood of needing a dose reduction with their levothyroxine. Data was also limited due to lack of a recent TSH level for some patients which emphasized the need for routine monitoring of TSH levels particularly every 6 months and every 3 months for patients experiencing at least 15% weight loss until weight loss stabilizes.
Moderators
IC

Imran Chughtai

Critical Care Specialist and PGY-1 Residency Program Director, Holy Cross Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Sammie Zou

Sammie Zou

My name is Sammie Zou, and I'm currently a PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at the Wilkes-Barre VA Medical Center. I graduated from the Wilkes University Nesbitt School of Pharmacy in 2025 where I earned my PharmD. I hope to practice in an outpatient setting as an ambulatory care pharmacist... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Donna Grant

Donna Grant

Clinical Pharmacist, Elliot Hospital
I have worked at the Elliot Hospital for over 20 years. I work all over the hospital - medical floors, PEDI/NICU and our Cancer Center. Really enjoy the variety. I have been a preceptor for about 3 and 1/2 years and have really enjoyed precepting our residents especially this yea... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 6

8:00am EDT

Effect of emergency department stay on second dose antibiotic administration delays
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Title: 
Effect of emergency department stay on second dose antibiotic administration delays   
 
Authors: 
Trevor Shaffer, PharmD, Temeka D. Lewis-Wolfson, PharmD, BCPS, BCCCP, Marcia Brackbill, PharmD, BCPS 
 
Learning Objective: 
Attendees will be able to explain the variables that affect antibiotic administration delays and sepsis outcomes. 
 
Background/Objective: 
Timely antibiotics are key in sepsis management. This study assesses whether emergency department length of stay contributes to delays in second dose antibiotic administration among sepsis patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). 
 
Methods: 
A retrospective chart review was conducted including patients aged ≥ 18 years admitted to the ICU with a documented sepsis diagnosis between December 1, 2023, to November 30, 2025. Exclusions were death or comfort care within 24 hours of ICU admission, transfer from an inpatient unit or outside hospital, received fewer than two antibiotic doses, or first antibiotic dose administered more than 3 hours after emergency department (ED) arrival. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients who experienced a delayed second antibiotic dose. Patients were stratified by ED length of stay (LOS) into two groups: <5 hours or ≥ 5 hours. Secondary outcomes included time intervals from ED arrival to antibiotic order entry, order entry to verification, and verification to administration. Additional secondary outcomes included ICU and hospital LOS, in-hospital mortality, incidence and duration of mechanical ventilation (MV), and initial antibiotic coverage. 
 
Results: 
A total of 69 patient encounters met inclusion criteria, with 30 patients in the < 5-hour group and 39 patients in the ≥ 5-hour group. A total of 16 (53%) of the < 5-hour group experienced a dose delay compared to 12 (31%) of the ≥ 5-hour group (p = 0.058). There were no significant findings for any of the secondary outcomes. 
 
Conclusion:  
In this study, no association was identified between ED LOS and second antibiotic dose delays. Given the limited sample size, additional studies with larger patient populations are warranted to further evaluate the impact of transitions of care on timely antibiotic administration in sepsis.  
 
Self-Assessment Question: 
True or False – Patients who experience an extended ED LOS are more likely to experience delayed antibiotic administration.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Trevor Shaffer

Trevor Shaffer

PGY1 Pharmacy Practice Resident, Valley Health - Winchester Medical Center
Hello, my name is Trevor Shaffer, PharmD, and I am a PGY1 Pharmacy Practice Resident at Winchester Medical Center. I graduated from Shenandoah University Bernard J. Dunn School of Pharmacy in 2025. My plans for post-residency are to seek out a career in hospital pharmacy.
Evaluators
avatar for Bi Kim

Bi Kim

Internal Medicine Clinical Pharmacist Practitioner, Washington DCVA Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 5

8:00am EDT

Characterizing the use of hydroxyurea in patients with HbSC at a large academic medical center
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Authors: Madhura Pradhan, PharmD; Nadirah El Amin, DO; Jennifer Newlin, PA-C; Cady Noda, PharmD, BCPPS 

Objective: At the conclusion of my presentation, the participants will be able to explain the clinical benefit and safety of hydroxyurea in patients with hemoglobin SC disease of all ages.  

Self-Assessment Question: True or False: Primary literature and this current project recommend restricting the use of hydroxyurea to patients with HbSC aged 18 years and older due to higher rates of neutropenia in patients less than 18 years of age. Answer: False 

Background: Current sickle cell disease (SCD) guidelines offer vague recommendations for hydroxyurea (HU) use in patients with hemoglobin SC disease (HbSC). We aim to characterize HU use in patients with HbSC of all ages at a large academic medical center. 

Methods: This quality improvement project is a retrospective chart review of pediatric and adult patients diagnosed with HbSC who were prescribed hydroxyurea. Primary outcome was vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC) and acute chest syndrome (ACS), stratified and compared via proportion of days covered (PDC) status: low PDC vs moderate PDC vs high PDC. Secondary outcomes include average HbF, average total Hgb, hospitalization for any reason, incidence of neutropenia or thrombocytopenia, and incidence of hydroxyurea discontinued by the patient or medical team, all within the last 12 months. Data was analyzed via descriptive statistics for continuous data and Fisher’s Exact Test for nominal data. 

Results: There were 109 patients who had a diagnosis of HbSC and prescribed HU. More patients fell in the low PDC group (63.3%) vs moderate PDC (8.26%) vs high PDC (28.44%) groups. Median number of VOC was 1 event [IQR 0 – 6] in the low PDC group, and 1 event [IQR 0-4.75] in the moderate-to-high PDC groups (p=0.987). Median number of ACS events was 0 in both the low PDC and moderate-to-high PDC groups (p=0.117). There was no difference in incidence of neutropenia (p=0.636), thrombocytopenia (p=1.0), HU stopped by the team (p=0.296), or HU stopped by the patient (p=0.737) within the last 12 months in the low PDC and moderate-to-high PDC groups.  

Conclusions: Patients with HbSC demonstrated low adherence to hydroxyurea based on PDC measurements. Rates of VOC events were similar between the low PDC and moderate-to-high PDC groups. The low incidence of thrombocytopenia and neutropenia supports the safety of HU in this population. These findings highlight the need to improve medication adherence while continuing to offer HU to patients with HbSC at our institution.   

Moderators Presenters
avatar for Madhura Pradhan

Madhura Pradhan

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, VCU Health
I am a PGY1 Pharmacy Resident at VCU Health who has early committed to PGY2 Oncology at VCU Health. Last May, I graduated from University of North Carolina's Eshelman School of Pharmacy. In the future, I plan on serving hematology/oncology patients at a large academic medical center... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Sarah Siemion

Sarah Siemion

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center
Dr. Siemion is a graduate of the Nesbitt School of Pharmacy at Wilkes University. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy in 2010. She then completed a PGY1 pharmacy residency at Orlando Regional Medical Center. After completion of her residency, she accepted a position at Geisinger Wyoming... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 8

8:00am EDT

Resident Presentation - Michele Mathew
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Title: Optimizing Peri-Operative Management of SGLT-2 Inhibitors
Authors: Michele Mathew, PharmD; Jennifer Premus, PharmD; Elaena Quattrocchi, BS, PharmD, FASHP, CDC; Preethi Samuel, PharmD, BCACP, AAHIVP 
Self Assessment Question:
Which of the following best describes the recommended peri-operative management of SGLT-2i to reduce the risk of EDKA?
A. Continue therapy until the morning of surgery
B. Hold the medication 24 hours before surgery
C. Hold the medication at least 72 hours prior to surgery or procedures requiring anesthesia
D. Discontinue therapy only after surgery is completed
Learning Objectives:  
At the conclusion of this presentation, participants will be able to: 
Explain how SGLT-2i contribute to EDKA development in surgical patients
Describe the mechanism of EDKA associated with SGLT-2i use in the peri-operative setting
Evaluate the adherence to institutional SGLT-2i management guidelines
 
Background/Objective: SGLT-2i improve cardiovascular and renal outcomes but their use has been linked to an increased risk of EDKA. Generally, SGLT-2i are held for at least 72 hours prior to surgery or procedure. Currently, there are limited studies evaluating SGLT-2i use in the preoperative setting. By addressing this gap in the literature, the study aims to clarify whether adherence to institutional policies can reduce the rate of EDKA and improve preoperative safety for patients taking SGLT-2i. 
 
Methods: This is a single-center retrospective chart review evaluating adherence to institutional preoperative SGLT-2i protocols and the incidence of EDKA in surgical patients at Staten Island University Hospital. Subjects for inclusion were identified from the electronic medical record as adult patients >18 years who had a procedure or surgery requiring anesthesia between February 22, 2024 - October 1, 2025. Eligible patients must have been prescribed a SGLT-2i prior to surgery or procedure. Exclusion criteria include patients <18 years and pregnancy. The primary outcome will be the percentage of patient's adherent to SGLT-2i institutional preoperative management guidelines. Secondary outcomes will include incidence of EDKA in adherent versus non-adherent patients, patient or surgery-related risk factors associated with EDKA, and clinical outcomes such as hospital length of stay and in-hospital mortality.

Results: Among 517 patients evaluated, only 212 patients (41%) appropriately adhered to Northwell Health’s peri-operative SGLT-2 inhibitor management policy. Policy non-adherence occurred in 305 patients (59%), with the primary reason being unknown SGLT-2 inhibitor hold duration in 288 patients (94.4%), followed by inappropriate medication hold in 17 patients (5.6%). Missing EDKA diagnostic laboratory values were present in 266 patients (87.2%). Mean SGLT-2 inhibitor hold duration was 4.12 ± 1.4 days. No confirmed cases of EDKA were identified in either the appropriately held or non-adherent groups, median hospital length of stay was 2 days (IQR 1–5), and mortality was low at 0.2% (1 patient).

Conclusion: The primary barriers to compliance were largely related to documentation deficiencies, incomplete medication reconciliation, and unclear preoperative hold durations rather than deliberate inappropriate prescribing. Although no confirmed cases of EDKA were identified, the high frequency of missing diagnostic laboratory values likely limited accurate event detection and may underestimate complete incidence. These findings suggest that while institutional guidelines provide an important for reducing perioperative EDKA risk, policy implementation alone is insufficient without effective interdisciplinary education and consistent provider awareness,

Moderators Presenters
avatar for Michele Mathew

Michele Mathew

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, Staten Island University Hospital
My name is Michele Mathew (PharmD, RPh) and I am a PGY-1 pharmacy resident at Staten Island University Hospital - Northwell Health. I received my Doctor of Pharmacy degree from St. John’s University in 2025. My current interests include diabetes, cardiology, and heart failure. My... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 2

8:00am EDT

Resident Presentation - Min Jung Jo
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Title:
Assessing the impact of a pharmacist-led proton pump inhibitor deprescribing initiative on the pattern of proton pump inhibitor use.

Authors:
Min Jung Jo, PharmD; Kelsey Ryan, PharmD

Objective: 
Audience members will be able to describe the impact of a pharmacist-led proton pump inhibitor (PPI) deprescribing initiative on the pattern of PPI use.

Self-Assessment Question: 
How can pharmacists promote appropriate use of PPIs in hospital settings?

Background: 
While proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) can effectively treat acid-related gastrointestinal disorders, overuse during hospital admissions is an ongoing concern. Pharmacist-led interventions can reinforce appropriate use of PPIs.

Methods: 
This pre- and post-implementation study evaluated the pattern of proton pump inhibitor (PPI) use in two publicly funded hospitals and assessed the impact of a pharmacist-led PPI deprescribing initiative after a proposed intervention. Pre-intervention data came from patients with an active PPI order between September 2024 and August 2025. Patients who were hospitalized for less than 3 months or already discharged were excluded. Data collected included treatment duration, indication, deprescribing attempts, and reported adverse effects associated with long-term use. The intervention included an in-service presentation focused on PPI deprescribing and an evidence-based deprescribing algorithm for providers to reference. Post-intervention data included PPI orders discontinued, dose or frequency adjustments, or change to a different antisecretory agent.

Results: 
Prior to intervention, 98 patients were identified for data analysis. Thirty-seven (37.8%) had an appropriate indication for long-term PPI use. There were 91 (92.9%) patients who were prescribed a PPI for more than 3 months. PPI use beyond 1 year was seen in 43 (43.9%) patients, half of which experienced hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia, or C. difficile related diarrhea. Deprescribing attempts were documented in 32 (23.5%) patients. Post-implementation preliminary data includes 86 patients. PPI deprescribing attempts were made in 21 (24.4%) patients. Data collection is ongoing; results may be updated.

Conclusion: 
Findings from this study suggest that pharmacist-led interventions may reinforce more safe and effective use of PPIs.
Moderators
EJ

Eun Jin Park

RPD, Johns Hopkins Howard County Medical Center
Presenters Evaluators
UT

Unable to Attend

Organizers to assign a new evaluator.
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 3

8:00am EDT

Impact of pharmacist education on ceftriaxone and azithromycin duration of therapy for community acquired pneumonia
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Authors
Jae Sohn, PharmD 
Daryn Norwood, PharmD, BCPS 
Eun Jin Park, PharmD, BCPS, BCIDP 
Kelly Hu, PharmD, BCPS 
Nehal Ahmed, PharmD, BCPS 
 
Learning Objective 
To evaluate ceftriaxone and azithromycin duration of therapy for non-severe community-acquired pneumonia and assess the impact of pharmacist education on treatment duration. 
 
Background  
To evaluate the impact of pharmacist-led education on the duration of ceftriaxone and azithromycin therapy for non-severe community-acquired pneumonia. 
 
Methods
This single-center retrospective before-and-after study will include adults who received ceftriaxone and azithromycin for provider-diagnosed community-acquired pneumonia diagnosed at admission or within 48 hours of hospitalization. Patients will be excluded if clinical stability is not achieved within 72 hours, if methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, or Legionella pneumonia is suspected or confirmed, if structural lung disease or immunocompromising conditions are present, or if alternative antibiotics are required. The primary outcome will be the appropriateness of ceftriaxone and azithromycin therapy duration. Secondary outcomes will include total antibiotic duration, combined inpatient and outpatient ceftriaxone and azithromycin duration, 30-day readmission, and Clostridioides difficile infection within 30 days. 
 
Result:
Among 100 patients included (50 pre-intervention, 50 post-intervention), overall appropriateness of ceftriaxone and azithromycin duration increased from 18% to 44% (p=0.0089). Azithromycin appropriateness improved from 38% to 66% (p=0.0089), while ceftriaxone appropriateness increased from 42% to 58% (p=0.161). Mean total antibiotic duration decreased from 6.4 to 5.7 days. Mean ceftriaxone duration increased from 3.3 to 3.9 days, while mean azithromycin duration decreased from 3.1 to 3.0 days. Thirty-day readmission rates were unchanged between groups, and no 30-day C. difficile infections occurred.
 
Conclusion:
Pharmacist education was associated with improved guideline-concordant antibiotic duration for adults with community-acquired pneumonia, particularly for azithromycin. The greatest improvement was observed among patients with length of stay ≥48 hours, suggesting inpatient stewardship efforts may be most effective when there is sufficient time to intervene. Patients with shorter hospitalizations may benefit from discharge-focused interventions to optimize total antibiotic duration.

Self-Assessment Question:
For clinically stable patients with non-severe community-acquired pneumonia, what is the recommended maximum duration of therapy?
 A. Beta-lactam 5 days and azithromycin 3 days
 B. Beta-lactam 7 days and azithromycin 5 days
 C. Beta-lactam 10 days and azithromycin 5 days
 D. Continue both antibiotics until discharge
Moderators
avatar for Amber Carter

Amber Carter

Residency Program Coordinator/Clinical Pharmacist, UK King's Daughters Medical Center
I am a 2021 graduate of Marshall University School of Pharmacy in Huntington, WV and I completed PGY1 residency at King's Daughters Medical Center in Ashland, KY in 2022. After completing residency, I accepted a position as a staff/clinical pharmacist at King's Daughters and later... Read More →
Presenters
avatar for Jae Young Sohn

Jae Young Sohn

My name is Jae Young Sohn, a PGY-1 pharmacy resident at Johns Hopkins Howard County Medical Center in Columbia, Maryland. I earned my Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Loma Linda University School of Pharmacy and completed my undergraduate training in biology at Pacific Union College... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Amy Cook

Amy Cook

Critical Care/Trauma Clinical Specialist, HCA Henrico Doctors’ Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 4

8:00am EDT

Evaluation of the utilization of a large language model for categorization of clinical pharmacist interventions
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Authors: Kaitlyn Healy, PharmD; Siu Yan (Amy) Yeung, PharmD, BCCCP; Clement Ng, PharmD, CAHIMS; Brian Grover, PharmD, BCPS; Hyunuk Seung, MS 
Learning Objective: Describe the feasibility of utilizing a large language model (LLM) to analyze clinical interventions completed by pharmacists and assign appropriate categorization.   
Background/Objective: The goal of this study is to use a LLM software to sort pharmacist interventions into predefined categories determined by the research team and compare the interrater reliability of sorting completed by the LLM compared to that of a pharmacist.
Methods: This retrospective study evaluated pharmacist interventions documented within the electronic health record (EHR). Completed pharmacist interventions include both structured fields and free-text documentation. Interventions were extracted from the EHR, de-identified, and a random sampling was selected for inclusion. Selected interventions were categorized by both the research team and a large language model (LLM). The LLM used in this study, GPT-5 accessed via the Microsoft Copilot™ interface, was adapted using structured prompt engineering to simulate pharmacist clinical reasoning. Retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) was incorporated to support predefined categorization of interventions. Inter-rater agreement between the research team and the LLM will be assessed using weighted Cohen’s kappa analysis. A total of 852 interventions will be analyzed based on a power calculation targeting a kappa of 0.70.  
Results: Overall, 889 interventions were included. All 13 categories were used by both the LLM and the pharmacist reference standard. Interventions received a mean of 1.23 labels and a median of 1, though 185 pharmacist-reviewed and 168 LLM-reviewed interventions were assigned multiple labels. Primary category agreement between the LLM and the reference standard was substantial (κ=0.70; 95% CI: 0.67–0.74), closely aligning with inter‑pharmacist agreement (κ=0.72; 95% CI: 0.69–0.76). Multi‑label agreement was similarly strong, with Jaccard similarity of 0.76 for LLM vs reference and 0.77 for pharmacist vs pharmacist, alongside low Hamming loss and no consistent pattern found regarding category‑level variability.
Conclusions:  LLM performance in classifying pharmacist interventions aligned with human classification, with substantial agreement seen on primary categorization and multilabel alignment. These findings support the potential use of LLMs for pharmacist intervention classification tasks. 
Self-Assessment Question:  
  • Which of the following describes the purpose of using a large language model in this study?  
  • To replace pharmacist clinical decision making.  
  • To generate new pharmacist interventions.  
  • To categorize completed pharmacist interventions.  
  • To standardize documentation of pharmacist interventions.  

Moderators
avatar for Patrick Huffman

Patrick Huffman

Residency Program Director, Beckley VAMC
Presenters
avatar for Kaitlyn Healy

Kaitlyn Healy

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, University of Maryland Medical Center
Dr. Kaitlyn Healy is originally from Buffalo, NY. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy from The University at Buffalo, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. Her professional interests include oncology and academia. After completion of PGY1 residency, Kaitlyn is eager to purse... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:00am - 8:20am EDT
Room 1

8:20am EDT

Evaluation of type II diabetes mellitus control with continuous glucose monitoring versus blood glucose monitoring in a veteran population
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Title:
Evaluation of type II diabetes mellitus control with continuous glucose monitoring versus blood glucose monitoring in a veteran population

Authors:
Christopher Lombardo, PharmD; Angela Bang, PharmD, BCPS; Patricia White-Thorpe, PharmD, BCGP; Allison Wostbrock, PharmD

Learning Objective:
Audience members will be able to identify  and quantify the reasons for and differences in the degree of hemoglobin A1C (HbA1c) reduction in patients with type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) given either a blood glucose monitor (BGM) or continuous glucose monitor (CGM) for self monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG).

Background/Objective:
This project aims to evaluate glycemic control for patients utilizing CGMs versus patients utilizing BGMs at the VA New Jersey Health Care System, to determine the potential benefit of CGM use to the veteran patient population

Methods:
This was a single centered, retrospective, pre-post observational quality improvement project which was conducted using an electronic health record reporting system at the VA New Jersey Health Care System. Patients were included if they were aged 18 years or older with a diagnosis of T2DM, received either the Accu-Chek Guide Me Blood Glucose Meter or the Freestyle Libre 3 CGM System between January 1st, 2024 and September 30th, 2024, and were actively enrolled with a VA provider. Patients were excluded if they did not have a baseline HbA1c measurement collected within 3 months prior to or one month after meter initiation, if their baseline HbA1c measurement was > 7.0%, if they had received a CGM prior to Freestyle Libre 3, if their T2DM was managed by an outside provider, and if they did not have a HbA1c measurement collected within 9-15 months after meter initiation. The primary outcome was the change from baseline HbA1c at approximately 12 months after meter initiation. Descriptive statistics were used to assess study outcomes.

Results:
A total of 80 patients were included in this study. 40 patients conducted SMBG using BGMs and 40 patients conducted SMBG using CGMs during the study period. The mean baseline HbA1c measurements in the BGM and CGM groups were 9.81% and 9.33% respectively. CGM use was associated with a mean HbA1c reduction of 1.43% at 12 months, whereas BGM use was associated with a mean HbA1c reduction of 1.27% at 12 months.

Conclusions:
This study found that veterans who conducted SMBG utilizing CGMs saw a slightly larger average reduction in HbA1c at 12 months than those utilizing BGMs. Patients utilizing CGMs had higher baseline HbA1C levels and a higher incidence of insulin use than those utilizing BGMs. For these reasons, the use of CGMs over in patients on noninsulin therapy warrants further investigation.

Self Assessment Question:
Which of the following patients would be most likely to benefit from initiation of a CGM?
 A. 85-year-old male with A1C of 8.4%, FBG between 60 - 150
 B. 45-year-old female with A1C of 9.7%, FBG between 144 – 171
 C. 71-year-old male with A1C of 10.9%, FBG between 55 – 207
 D. 60-year-old male with A1C of 7.7%, FBG between 100 - 180
Moderators
IC

Imran Chughtai

Critical Care Specialist and PGY-1 Residency Program Director, Holy Cross Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Christopher Lombardo

Christopher Lombardo

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, East Orange VA Medical Center
My name is Christopher Lombardo, and I am a PGY1 Pharmacy Resident at the East Orange VA Medical Center. I am a graduate of Wilkes University Nesbitt School of Pharmacy. I am currently interested in pursuing employment the ambulatory care/transitions of care settings.
Evaluators
avatar for Donna Grant

Donna Grant

Clinical Pharmacist, Elliot Hospital
I have worked at the Elliot Hospital for over 20 years. I work all over the hospital - medical floors, PEDI/NICU and our Cancer Center. Really enjoy the variety. I have been a preceptor for about 3 and 1/2 years and have really enjoyed precepting our residents especially this yea... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 6

8:20am EDT

Evaluating the effectiveness of guanfacine for dexmedetomidine withdrawal in critically ill adults
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Authors: Halle Markle, PharmD; Lauren Albertina, PharmD, BCCCP; Bobbie McLeod, PharmD, BCCP; Maggie Shushe, PharmD, BCCCP
Objective: At the conclusion of this presentation, participants will be able to define the role of guanfacine in dexmedetomidine withdrawal management.  
Self-assessment question: Based on the results from this study, guanfacine should be routinely recommended for all patients in the ICU who are on prolonged dexmedetomidine infusions?
Background: Prolonged dexmedetomidine infusions may cause withdrawal. Guanfacine, an oral α2-agonist with greater central selectivity than clonidine, may aid in weaning. This study evaluated whether guanfacine reduces wean duration or withdrawal outcomes.
Methods: This was a retrospective, single-center, matched cohort study that included adult patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) who received continuous dexmedetomidine infusions for more than 48 hours. Patients who received guanfacine during active dexmedetomidine infusions were compared to matched controls who received dexmedetomidine alone. 1:1 propensity score matching was performed using age, sex, and weight within broad diagnosis categories. The primary endpoint was time to dexmedetomidine discontinuation following the initiation of weaning. Secondary endpoints included successful discontinuation within 48, 72, and 120 hours, dexmedetomidine restart within 48 hours, and adjunctive sedative use. Time-to-event outcomes were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier methods with the Mann-Whitney U Test. Secondary outcomes were compared using Fisher's exact test. 
Results: A total of 94 patients were included in this study, with 47 patients in both the dexmedetomidine plus guanfacine and dexmedetomidine-only groups. Median time to dexmedetomidine discontinuation was 75.4 hours (IQR 31.8-182.8) in the guanfacine group versus 52.5 hours (IQR, 26.7-95.4) in the dexmedetomidine-only group (p=0.072). Patients receiving guanfacine had significantly longer total dexmedetomidine exposure (274.5 vs 163.5 hours; p<0.001). Discontinuation rates at 48 and 72 hours were similar between groups; however, by 120 hours, more patients in the dexmedetomidine-only group were successfully weaned (91.5% vs 59.6%; p<0.001). Rates of dexmedetomidine restart and adjunctive sedative use were similar between groups.  
Conclusion: In this matched cohort, guanfacine did not reduce dexmedetomidine weaning duration or withdrawal-related outcomes. Longer dexmedetomidine exposure in the guanfacine group suggests potential confounding by baseline sedation complexity and/or the subjective definition of the start of weaning in the control group. Further prospective studies are needed to clarify the role of guanfacine in dexmedetomidine withdrawal management.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Halle Markle

Halle Markle

PGY1 Resident, Inova Fairfax Medical Campus
Halle Markle, PharmD, is a current PGY1 resident at Inova Fairfax Medical Campus. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Chemistry and Doctor of Pharmacy degree at The Ohio State University before pursuing postgraduate residency training. Next year, Halle plans to continue her training... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Bi Kim

Bi Kim

Internal Medicine Clinical Pharmacist Practitioner, Washington DCVA Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 5

8:20am EDT

Early versus late belatacept conversion: impact on allograft function in kidney transplant recipients
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Authors: Seo Young Chun, PharmD; Melissa Chaung, PharmD, BCPS; Michael A. Wynd, PharmD, BCPS

Learning Objective: At the conclusion of my presentation, the audience will be able to compare the allograft function outcomes of early vs late conversion from tacrolimus to belatacept in kidney transplant recipients. 

Background/Objective:
Assess the impact of timing of conversion from tacrolimus to belatacept on allograft function in kidney transplant recipients (KTRs).

Methods:
This was a single-center, retrospective cohort study evaluating first kidney-alone, adult (age ≥ 18 years at the time of conversion), Epstein-Barr virus IgG seropositive KTRs who converted from tacrolimus to belatacept between January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2024. Recipients of multi-organ transplants or patients receiving belatacept for < 30 days were excluded. Outcomes at 1-year post-conversion were compared between KTRs who converted early (< 6 months post-transplant) vs late (≥ 6 months post-transplant). The primary endpoint was the change in estimated glomerular filtration rate from baseline. Secondary endpoints included patient and allograft survival, biopsy-proven acute rejection, opportunistic viral infections, malignancy, discontinuation-rate of belatacept, and adverse events. Demographic data, within-cohort, and between-cohort comparisons were analyzed using appropriate statistics.

Results:
Of 177 patients screened, 76 patients were included, with 67 patients in the early conversion group and 9 patients in the late conversion group. Baseline demographics were similar between groups, although pre-transplant donor-specific antibodies were more common in the late conversion group (44.4% vs 11.9% [p = 0.04]). Median eGFR at conversion was lower in the early conversion group compared to the late conversion group (20 vs 45 mL/min/1.73m2 [p = 0.01]). At 1 year post-conversion, the early conversion group demonstrated a greater change in eGFR (23 vs 7 mL/min/1.73m2 [p = 0.0083]). No significant differences were observed in patient and allograft survival, rejection, opportunistic infections, and belatacept discontinuation between groups. 

Conclusion:
Early conversion from tacrolimus to belatacept was associated with greater improvement in eGFR, likely reflecting lower baseline eGFR and greater opportunity for recovery at the time of conversion. While interpretation is limited by the disproportionately smaller late conversion cohort, this study provides descriptive real-world data on institutional belatacept conversion practices and outcomes across different conversion strategies.

Self-Assessment Questions:
Which of the following is a common reason for patients to convert from tacrolimus to belatacept?
  1. Nephrotoxicity
  2. Gastrointestinal side effects
  3. Neurotoxicity
  4. All of the above
Moderators
avatar for Patrick Huffman

Patrick Huffman

Residency Program Director, Beckley VAMC
Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 1

8:20am EDT

Incorporating penicillin allergy assessment in preoperative evaluation: landmine antimicrobial stewardship effort in support of surgical services within the Defense Health Agency
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
TitleIncorporating penicillin allergy assessment in preoperative evaluation: landmine antimicrobial stewardship effort in support of surgical services within a military treatment facility

Authors: Kailey B. Moss, PharmD; Memar D. Ayalew, PharmD, BCIDP, AAHIVP

Learning Objective: Describe the impact pharmacist-led penicillin de-labeling services can have on optimizing surgical prophylaxis.

Background/ObjectiveIdentify patients with penicillin and/or other β-lactam allergies ahead of elective surgical procedures, provide a link to appropriate de-labeling services in the perioperative arena, and facilitate access to first-line prophylactic antibiotics.

MethodsUtilizing generated reports, pharmacist-led Penicillin Allergy Management (PAM) clinic personnel screened and identified the target population: patients > 18 years of age, non-pregnant, labeled penicillin (PCN) and/or other β-lactam allergy, and anticipated procedure between Oct. 1st to Dec. 31st, 2025.
An Antimicrobial Stewardship Pharmacist then risk-stratified patients with labeled PCN allergies using previously validated risk assessment tools (PEN-FAST and PAT-C score), with low-risk patients contacted to schedule a direct oral amoxicillin challenge (DOAC) appointment prior to respective surgery.
Patients identified as having moderate to high risk PCN and/or cephalosporin allergies were referred to the Allergy and Immunology (A/I) clinic for further evaluation by an allergist.
Upon successful intervention either by PAM or the A/I clinic, the allergy was removed from the health record, and the patient was longitudinally followed for utilization of first-line prophylactic antibiotics.

ResultsA total of 962 patients were screened over the course of the 3-month period with 99 (10%) patients flagged as having a PCN and/or other β-lactam allergy, 93-99% of whom were stratified as having low-risk PCN allergy. Twenty patients in this cohort were de-labeled successfully either by DOAC or chart review: 14 were de-labeled prior and 6 were de-labeled after their respective procedure. Of the 14 patients de-labeled prior to surgery, 10/14 required administration of systemic antibiotics with 8/10 (80%) receiving first-line surgical prophylaxis. This compares to only 15/38 (39%) patients who received first-line surgical prophylaxis in individuals unable to receive intervention prior to procedure (p-value < 0.05).

ConclusionConsistent with reported literature, we found local prevalence of patients with PCN and/or other β-lactam allergy in this study cohort to be 10%. Following successful pharmacist-driven de-labeling, 80% of patients received first-line prophylactic antibiotics. This demonstrates that appropriate de-labeling in the perioperative arena is essential to optimizing surgical prophylaxis, and by extension, critical to improving overall patient outcomes.

Self-Assessment Question: Which tool(s) can be utilized to determine risk of an IgE-mediated reaction to a direct oral amoxicillin challenge in patients with a penicillin allergy?
A. PEN-FAST Score
B. PAT-C Score
C. q-SOFA Score
D. MELD Score
E. Both A and B
Moderators
EJ

Eun Jin Park

RPD, Johns Hopkins Howard County Medical Center
Presenters Evaluators
UT

Unable to Attend

Organizers to assign a new evaluator.
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 3

8:20am EDT

Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infections in Orthopedic Surgery: A Case-Control Study
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infections in Orthopedic Surgery: A Case-Control Study 
Lama Almutairi, Michael Klompas, James Maguire, Madeleine Bartzak, Brandon Dionne, Jeffrey C. Pearson

Background/objective:
Surgical site infections (SSIs) complicate orthopedic surgery, highlighting the need to clarify associated risk factors. By the end of the presentation, participants should be able to identify risk factors for SSIs in hip or knee surgery.

Methods:
This was a single-center retrospective case-control study conducted at a tertiary academic medical center. Patients who underwent orthopedic knee or hip surgery between August 2020 and May 2025 were included. Cases were patients who developed an SSI within 90 days, according to the National Healthcare Safety Network criteria. Controls were patients who did not develop an SSI within the same follow-up period. Cases were matched 1:4 to controls by surgery type (hip vs. knee) and procedure date (month and year). The association between risk factors and SSIs was assessed using univariable and multivariable logistic regression. Prespecified risk factors included body mass index (BMI) ≥25 kg/m², diabetes mellitus with most recent A1C ≥7%, surgical duration ≥120 minutes, age ≥60 years, S. aureus nares screening, and perioperative antibiotic choice (cefazolin alone vs. other).

Results: 
Among 250 patients (50 cases, 200 controls), the mean BMI was 30.2 kg/m² for cases and 27.9 kg/m² for controls. Hypertension was present in 62% of cases versus 55% of controls, and diabetes was present in 24% of cases versus 14.5% of controls. Perioperative antibiotic regimens were similar between groups: cefazolin alone was used in 48% of cases vs 49% of controls, while cefazolin plus vancomycin was used in 40.0% vs 43.5%. S. aureus was the most common pathogen. Of the prespecified risk factors, BMI ≥25 kg/m² [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 3.59, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.21-10.66] and surgical duration ≥120 minutes [aOR 2.30, 95% (CI) 1.18-4.48] were each associated with an increased risk of SSIs in the multivariable regression analysis.

Conclusion:
These findings provide insight into risk factors associated with SSIs, which can be considered to optimize peri-operative practices to reduce SSIs risk in patients undergoing orthopedic surgery.

Assessment Question
Which of the following perioperative risk factors has been associated with an increased risk of surgical site infection following orthopedic surgery?
  1. Age younger than 50 years
  1. Surgical duration 60 minutes
  1. Body mass index ≥25 kg/m²
  2. Cefazolin alone for surgical prophylaxis
Correct answer: C
Moderators Presenters Evaluators
avatar for Sarah Siemion

Sarah Siemion

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center
Dr. Siemion is a graduate of the Nesbitt School of Pharmacy at Wilkes University. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy in 2010. She then completed a PGY1 pharmacy residency at Orlando Regional Medical Center. After completion of her residency, she accepted a position at Geisinger Wyoming... Read More →

Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 8

8:20am EDT

Safety outcomes of iron dextran compared to iron sucrose in pregnant women during an iron sucrose shortage
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Authors: Simran Kaur, PharmD; Jeffrey Hare, PharmD; Brianna Schafer, PharmD, BCPPS; Sewit Araia, PharmD 
Objective: At the conclusion of this presentation, the participant will be able to describe the incidence of severe adverse effects associated with intravenous iron dextran compared with iron sucrose in pregnancy
Pre-assessment question: Which IV iron formulation is associated with a higher risk of severe AE in pregnancy? (A. Iron sucrose B. Iron dextran C. Both have similar risk D. Not sure) 
Background: Intravenous iron is used when oral therapy is inadequate; however, comparative safety data among formulations are limited. This study compares the incidence of severe adverse effects between iron dextran and iron sucrose in pregnant women. 
Methods: This retrospective cohort study included pregnant women of any gestational age who received intravenous iron dextran or iron sucrose within the Geisinger Health System during the iron sucrose shortage from March 25, 2024, to February 20, 2025. Patients were identified using electronic health record medication and diagnosis codes. The primary outcome was the incidence of severe adverse effects, including anaphylaxis, circulatory failure, shock, etc. occurring within 24 hours of iron administration. Secondary outcomes included pre-treatment medications, emergency department admission, hospital admission, and administration of rescue medications. Adverse effects were categorized using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events grading. Primary and secondary outcome incidence rates were compared using fisher’s exact test. 
Results: Data from 150 patients per group were analyzed. Median age was 27 years, with gestational age 33 weeks (iron dextran) and 32 weeks (iron sucrose). Inpatient administration was less frequent with iron dextran (1.33%) vs iron sucrose (9.33%). Adverse events occurred in 2.7% of iron dextran patients and 0% with iron sucrose (p=0.1225). In the dextran group, 38% received premedication, with one ED visit (p=1), no hospitalizations, and 4 patients requiring rescue medications (p=0.1225).
Conclusion: In conclusion, Iron sucrose had zero incidence of adverse events, and they were more often observed in the patients that received iron dextran, however severe adverse events were uncommon. Iron dextran can be considered a safe alternative treatment for iron deficiency anemia in pregnancy when iron sucrose is not readily available as the preferred agent
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Simran Kaur

Simran Kaur

PGY 1/2 HSPAL Resident, Geisinger Health System
Simran Kaur, PharmD, is a current PGY1/PGY2 Health-System Pharmacy Administration and Leadership (HSPAL) resident. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and is completing training with a focus on clinical practice and leadership development... Read More →
Evaluators

Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 2

8:20am EDT

Impact of preoperative antibiotic timing on odds of surgical site infection
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Authors: Jovina Fager, PharmD; Alex Matika, PharmD, BCIDP; Lauren Allen, PharmD, BCIDP; Julia Bold, PharmD; Esrat Jahan, PharmD; Justin Miller, PharmD

Learning objective: Evaluate the impact of preoperative antibiotic timing on odds of surgical site infection (SSI).

Background: The ideal timing of preoperative antibiotic administration in relation to incision time remains unclear. This study aims to evaluate the optimal timing of preoperative antibiotic administration to mitigate the odds of SSIs.

Methods: This study was a retrospective, case-control trial evaluating 993 adult patients admitted to St. Luke’s University Health Network for a surgical procedure from January 2022 to December 2024. Patients were included at a 1:4 case-to-control, with cases defined as patients who developed a SSI, and controls defined as patients without subsequent SSI. Patients were excluded if they did not receive preoperative antibiotics, received preoperative antibiotics > 120 minutes prior to incision, underwent more than one procedure during index hospitalization, or had a preexisting infection at time and anatomical site of index procedure. The primary outcome was SSI odds by preoperative antibiotic administration time. Secondary outcomes included admission, hospital length of stay, and readmission for SSI management; and mortality at 30 and 90 days post-operation. SSIs were categorized using National Healthcare Safety Network definitions. The primary outcome was assessed using logistic regression.

Results: Cefazolin was the most frequent preoperative antibiotic administered (863 of 993 cases). This study demonstrated that cefazolin administration beyond 45 minutes prior to incision was associated with increased odds of SSI compared with administration at 15-45 minutes (OR 3.30, 95% CI 1.30-8.42; p = 0.012). In the subgroup analysis, clindamycin was associated with increased odds of SSI compared with cefazolin (OR 2.07, 95% CI 1.15-3.73; p = 0.015). 

Conclusion: Cefazolin should be administered within 45 minutes of procedure initiation to best mitigate the odds of SSIs. Cefazolin was associated with a decreased odds of SSIs compared with clindamycin, supporting its use as the preoperative antibiotic of choice.

Self-assessment question: Based on the results of this trial, in what time frame should cefazolin be administered preoperatively to best mitigate the odds of SSIs?
A. 0 to 45 minutes
B. 45 to 60 minutes
C. 60 to 120 minutes
D. None of the above
Moderators
avatar for Amber Carter

Amber Carter

Residency Program Coordinator/Clinical Pharmacist, UK King's Daughters Medical Center
I am a 2021 graduate of Marshall University School of Pharmacy in Huntington, WV and I completed PGY1 residency at King's Daughters Medical Center in Ashland, KY in 2022. After completing residency, I accepted a position as a staff/clinical pharmacist at King's Daughters and later... Read More →
Presenters
avatar for Jovina Fager

Jovina Fager

PGY1, St. Luke's University Health Network
2025 graduate from Philadelphia College of Pharmacy at Saint Joseph's University. Current PGY1 resident at St. Luke's University Health Netowork. Pursing a PGY2 in infectious diseases at St. Luke's University Health Network.
Evaluators
avatar for Amy Cook

Amy Cook

Critical Care/Trauma Clinical Specialist, HCA Henrico Doctors’ Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 4

8:20am EDT

Standardization of Tablet Splitting Workflows at JHHS
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
  • Title: Standardization of Tablet Splitting Workflows at JHHS
  • Authors: Eric Mackin, PharmD; Ian Watt, PharmD; Emily Pherson, PharmD, BCPS; Rosemary Duncan, PharmD, BCPS; Lisa Hutchins, PharmD, BCPPS; Dave Stimler, PharmD, MBA
  • Objective: Audience members will be able to outline the steps used to develop a standardized split tablets workflow across a health system.
  • Self Assessment Question: Which of the following is a benefit of standardizing split tablet practices across a health system?
    1. A. Clear accountability across departments
    2. B. Automatic selection of dispense code in EHR when dispensing split tablets
    3. C. Reduced variability for employees who work at multiple sites
    4. D. Decreased manual manipulation of orders on verification and reverification
    5. E. All of the above
  • Background: The purpose of this project is to gain consensus among Johns Hopkins Health System hospital sites on the preferred practice for splitting tablets, i.e., when tablets should be split in the pharmacy prior to dispensing or split by a nurse on the unit.
  • Methods: The objective of this project is to develop a workflow for splitting tablets that aligns Johns Hopkins Health System (JHHS) and allows for the implementation of enhancements to the EHR (Epic). To accomplish this, the project team confirmed current workflows for all JHHS hospitals, surveyed other hospitals and health systems to determine common practices, and gathered data on all enteral dispenses across JHHS in October 2025 using Epic SlicerDicer. This data was then analyzed in Microsoft Excel to quantify total enteral dispenses, dispenses that require splitting a tablet, repackaged doses dispensed, number of split dispenses for which a commercially available tablet exists for the intended dose, and most frequently split medications. A summary of the data was presented to a health system-level Automation and Operations Committee, and stakeholders from each hospital collaborated to gain consensus on the newly aligned workflow.
  • Results: JHHS hospitals initially reported varied split tablet workflows, ranging from pharmacy staff splitting all tablets to nurses splitting all tablets. JHHS hospitals also reported differences in prepackaging practices (unit dose packaging a pre-split tablet). Surveys of other health systems revealed no standard tablet-splitting practice. In October 2025, 2.2% of all enteral dispenses required splitting a tablet, with 28.7% being dispensed from pharmacy and 71.3% dispensed from ADC. Data analysis showed that this number could be further decreased by purchasing the lowest commercially available strength of more medications and increasing prepackaging practices. After discussion, the workgroup came to consensus on option 3: pharmacy staff split all tablets dispensed from the pharmacy; nursing staff split all tablets dispensed from the ADC. Pharmacy staff will also minimize the number of dispenses that require splitting by optimizing prepackaging and purchasing practices.
  • Conclusion: No national standard exists for tablet splitting workflows, creating variance in practice and complicating EHR optimization. JHHS pharmacies were able to come to consensus on a new workflow that works for all hospitals by assessing the objective impact of each potential new workflow and developing solutions that emphasize safety, accuracy, and efficiency.

Moderators
CL

Carol Luong

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Health
Presenters
avatar for Eric Mackin

Eric Mackin

PGY1 Medication Use Safety and Policy Resident, Johns Hopkins Hospital
Dr. Eric Mackin is the PGY1 Medication Use Safety and Policy pharmacy resident at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. He is originally from Louisville, Kentucky and completed pharmacy school at the University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy. After completion of PGY1, he will complete specialized... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:20am - 8:40am EDT
Room 7

8:40am EDT

Pumping Up a Patient's Time in Range
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Title: Pumping Up a Patient's Time in Range 

Authors: Nikki Polivka, PharmD, Marissa Chiumento, PharmD, Christina Brady, PharmD, BC-ADM, Rachel Wesolowski, PharmD, BCACP 
Learning Objective: Identify the difference in time in range (TIR) for patients who transition from a closed loop or open loop tubed insulin pump system to the closed loop Omnipod 5 tubeless system. 

Learning Objective:
Identify the difference in Time in Range (TIR) seen when patients with type 1 diabetes transition from a closed loop or open loop tubed insulin pump system to the closed loop Omnipod 5 tubeless pump system

Background/Objective: Insulin pump systems (both tubed and tubeless) that communicate with continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) are considered “closed-loop” as they can automatically adjust insulin based on blood glucose readings whereas pump systems that do not communicate with CGMs are considered “open-loop.” Closed-loop systems have previously shown improvements in TIR as well as A1c measurements in comparison to open-loop systems, and in practice patients tend to prefer a tubeless system in order to avoid the bulkiness of a tubed system. This research will provide further insight on the difference in TIR seen when patients with type 1 diabetes transition from a closed loop or open loop tubed insulin pump system to the closed loop Omnipod 5 tubeless pump system. 

Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study using electronic health records of adult patients with type 1 diabetes who transitioned from a closed or open loop tubed insulin pump to the closed loop tubeless Omnipod 5 insulin pump system managed by Geisinger providers from 2/1/2022-8/1/2025. Patients were excluded from the study if they had used an Omnipod 5 system for less than three months, used a tubed pump system for less than three months, had a pregnancy throughout any duration of the study period, and if they were less than 18 years of age. Data review involved the use of CGM/pump websites (Dexcom Clarity, Libreview, Glooko, Medtronic Carelink, Tandem Source) in order to find exact TIR reports. A paired t-test was used to compare changes in TIR and hemoglobin A1c readings between time spent on the tubed pump vs the tubeless system. An unpaired t-test was used to compare the amount of hospital admissions due to hypoglycemia and diabetic ketoacidosis for those on tubed pump therapy versus those on the Omnipod 5. 

Results: There was a total of 44 patients included in this study. Prior to pump system switch, there were a total of 22 patients who had their pump in automated mode while 22 patients had their pump in manual mode. Upon analysis, there was a statistically non-significant increase in TIR for patients who transitioned from tubed pump therapy to the Omnipod 5 (mean change +4.21%; p = 0.064). There was a statistically significant decrease in A1c for patients who transitioned from tubed pump therapy to the Omnipod 5 (mean change (mean change -0.41; p = 0.005). Finally, there was a statistically non-significant difference in the number of admissions for hypoglycemia (1 for tubed pump system, 1 for Omnipod 5; p = 1), and a statistically non-significant difference in the number of admissions for diabetic ketoacidosis (0 for tubed pump system, 0 for Omnipod 5; p = 1). 

Conclusion: There is a statistically non-significant increase in TIR for patients who transition from an open or closed loop tubed pump system to the tubeless closed loop Omnipod 5. 

Self-Assessment Question: T/F: It can be concluded that there is a true increase in time in range for patients who transition from a tubed pump system to the tubeless Omnipod 5. 

Moderators
IC

Imran Chughtai

Critical Care Specialist and PGY-1 Residency Program Director, Holy Cross Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Nikki Polivka

Nikki Polivka

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Geisinger Clinic Northeast
I graduated from Wilkes University Nesbitt School of Pharmacy in 2025. I'm currently completing a PGY1 pharmacy residency at Geisinger Clinic Northeast in Scranton, PA. My areas of interest include cardiology, diabetes, and academia. Upon residency completion, I will be practicing... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Donna Grant

Donna Grant

Clinical Pharmacist, Elliot Hospital
I have worked at the Elliot Hospital for over 20 years. I work all over the hospital - medical floors, PEDI/NICU and our Cancer Center. Really enjoy the variety. I have been a preceptor for about 3 and 1/2 years and have really enjoyed precepting our residents especially this yea... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 6

8:40am EDT

Evaluation of Guideline Adherence for Platelet Transfusion in Patients Receiving Antiplatelet Agents with Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT

Authors: Jordan Childress, PharmD; Joseph DiBlasi, PharmD, MBA, BCPS; Karen Frock, PharmD, BCCCP
Objective: This study evaluates adherence to guidelines for platelet transfusion in adults with spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) on antiplatelet therapy prior to admission and assesses associated clinical outcomes such as mortality, hematoma expansion, and thrombotic events.
Self-assessment Question: According to the American Heart Association (AHA)/American Stroke Association (ASA) guidelines, when are platelet transfusions recommended for patients on antiplatelet therapy who present with spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage? 
Background: The PATCH trial showed increased mortality with platelet transfusion in spontaneous ICH. As a result, guidelines do not recommend routine administration. Platelet transfusion use in this population has not been evaluated at WellSpan York Hospital.
Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study of patients 18 years or older with a diagnosis of spontaneous ICH at WellSpan York Hospital from 06/1/2022 to 11/30/2025. This study was IRB exempt. Patients were excluded if they had a platelet count of less than 100,000/mcL, were using anticoagulants, or were not receiving antiplatelet therapy within 7 days of admission. The primary outcome was guideline adherence which was defined as no platelet transfusion and no emergent neurosurgical intervention or platelet transfusion within 24 hours of admission with neurosurgical intervention. Secondary outcomes included 90-day survival, survival to hospital discharge, and hematoma expansion on 24-hour head computed tomography. Safety outcomes included documentation of transfusion reactions and new thrombotic events. Comparative statistics between cohorts will be analyzed. Descriptive statistics were utilized for data collection and analysis.
Results: A total of 140 patients were evaluated for inclusion. Most exclusions were due to lack of antiplatelet use within 7 days of admission and/or outpatient anticoagulant use, resulting in 47 patients included in the study. Among included patients, the majority were receiving aspirin (83%) in comparison to other antiplatelet agents and had supratentorial ICH (74.5%) bleeding. A neurosurgical intervention within 24 hours of ICH was performed in 21.3% of patients. Guideline adherence was observed in 49% of patients with the most common reason for non-adherence being platelet administration without intervention. There were no differences in secondary outcomes. Thrombotic events occurred in 15% of patients receiving platelets.
Conclusions: Guideline adherence was present in about half of the patient population. There was no difference in secondary outcomes such as 90-day mortality, hematoma expansion, or safety outcomes. Future implications include additional research in a larger patient population as well as provider engagement with guideline recommendations.  

Moderators Presenters
avatar for Jordan Childress

Jordan Childress

PGY2 Critical Care Pharmacy Resident, WellSpan York Hospital
Jordan Childress is a current PGY1 Pharmacy Resident at WellSpan York Hospital
Evaluators
avatar for Bi Kim

Bi Kim

Internal Medicine Clinical Pharmacist Practitioner, Washington DCVA Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 5

8:40am EDT

Evaluation of hemorrhagic conversion and use of fibrinogen products after fibrinolytic therapy for acute ischemic stroke
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Evaluation of hemorrhagic conversion and use of fibrinogen products after fibrinolytic therapy for acute ischemic stroke 

Authors
Norah Albanyan PharmD; Nihad Medar PharmD, BCCCP; Patricia Cyrus PharmD, BCPS; Melanie Goodberlet PharmD BCPS, BCCCP; Skyler Starkel PharmD, BCCCP

Learning Objective
Describe the differences in hemorrhagic conversion and bleeding outcomes between tenecteplase (TNK) and alteplase (tPA) in acute ischemic stroke.

Self-Assessment Question 
In this retrospective cohort study comparing tPA and TNK for acute ischemic stroke, what was observed regarding intracranial hemorrhagic (ICH) conversion within 24 hours?

A. TNK was associated with a significantly higher rate of ICH
B. tPA was associated with a significantly higher rate of ICH
C. There was no statistically significant difference in ICH between tPA and TNK
D. TNK eliminated the risk of ICH compared to tPA

Background /objective
Acute ischemic stroke (AIS) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. Alteplase (tPA) or tenecteplase (TNK) are used to improve outcomes. This study compares incidence of hemorrhagic conversion and use of fibrinogen products following tPA or TNK

Method
This was a single-center retrospective cohort study at a tertiary academic medical center approved by the Mass General Brigham Institutional Review Board (2025P002247). Adult patients (≥18 years) with AIS treated with tPA or TNK between January 2020 and October 2025 were included. Our institution transitioned to TNK as the preferred fibrinolytic agent for AIS in June 2023. Patients were excluded if 24-hour post-treatment neuroimaging was unavailable or thrombolytic dosing was outside guideline recommendations

The major outcome was intracranial hemorrhagic conversion within 24 hours. Minor outcomes included extracranial bleeding, time to hemorrhagic conversion, post-lysis fibrinogen levels, fibrinogen product use, and 30-day mortality. Categorical outcomes were compared using chi-square or Fisher’s exact tests, continuous variables using t-test or Mann–Whitney U test. A multivariable logistic regression identified independent predictors of hemorrhagic conversion.

Results
A total of 114 patients met eligibility, 55 (48.2%) received TNK and 59 (51.8%) tPA. Hemorrhagic conversion within 24 hours occurred in 6 patients in the TNK group and 7 in the tPA (10.9% vs 11.8%, p=0.87). There was no difference in time to hemorrhagic conversion, extracranial bleeding within 24 hours, or mortality between groups. Replacement with fibrinogen products was only seen in the tPA group (4 patients). Median fibrinogen at hemorrhagic conversion 381 mg/dL (TNK) vs 138.5 mg/dL (tPA). When controlling for confounders, a higher National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score was associated with hemorrhagic conversion.

Conclusion  
In this retrospective cohort of patients with AIS, TNK and tPA had similar rates of hemorrhagic transformation, extracranial bleeding, and 30-day in-hospital mortality, suggesting comparable bleeding safety profiles between the two agents in our cohort. Notably, fibrinogen product use was observed only in the tPA group, which had lower fibrinogen levels. Further research is needed to better define optimal reversal strategies for these agents.
Moderators Presenters
NA

Norah Albanyan

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, Brigham and Women's hospital
I am a PGY-1 pharmacy resident at Brigham and Women's Hospital. I earned my Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of the Incarnate Word Feik School of Pharmacy, and I will be starting a PGY-2 in critical care at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.
Evaluators
avatar for Sarah Siemion

Sarah Siemion

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center
Dr. Siemion is a graduate of the Nesbitt School of Pharmacy at Wilkes University. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy in 2010. She then completed a PGY1 pharmacy residency at Orlando Regional Medical Center. After completion of her residency, she accepted a position at Geisinger Wyoming... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 8

8:40am EDT

Antibiotic selection for skin and soft tissue infections in adults discharged from a community hospital’s emergency departments
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
LEARNING OBJECTIVE: 
  1. Learners will be able to recognize opportunities to improve antibiotic prescribing for SSTIs in a community hospital emergency department

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE:  This study aims to characterize and evaluate the appropriateness of antibiotic prescribing for skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI) in patients who are discharged from either Cambridge Health Alliance emergency departments (ED).

METHODS: A retrospective chart review will evaluate adult patients (≥18 years of age) discharged from our institution’s emergency departments with a primary chief complaint of cellulitis or abscess. Exclusion criteria include inpatient admission, concomitant or deep tissue infections, bone and joint infections, infections of the mouth, head, neck, or foot, those involving a bite, surgical site, or underlying hardware, or re-presenting within 72 hours of the index admission for the same infection. Treatment data collected includes incision and drainage and antibiotic agent, dose, and duration. Patients will be categorized by wound purulence and IDSA-defined infection severity (mild, moderate, severe). The primary outcome will be adherence of antibiotic agent, dose, and duration prescribing to 2014 IDSA guidelines. Secondary outcomes include readmission within 30 days of the index ED encounter and documented adverse reaction to antimicrobial therapy. 

RESULTS: 200 patients were included in the analysis. Appropriateness was defined as being in compliance with IDSA 2014 guidelines in respect to antibiotic agent, dose, and duration. 32.1% of purulent and 18.8% of nonpurulent infections were prescribed antibiotic regimens in compliance with guideline recommendations. Of these, 56.5% and 71.9% of purulent and nonpurulent infection antibiotics, respectively, were deemed inappropriate due to the duration of therapy. Antibiotic therapy was inappropriate due to broadened coverage in 26.2% and 56.3% of purulent and nonpurulent infections, respectively. In 3.5% and 6.3% of antibiotic regimens, the prescribed dose was below recommended ranges. All cause 30-day readmission was 16.1% and 25% with two documented adverse reactions.

CONCLUSION: It is anticipated that this quality improvement project will provide insight into prescribing practices for SSTIs at our institution’s EDs and opportunities for improvement. Based on these results, the authors plan to propose interventions to the ED which may include additional clinical decision-making support and/or providing departmental education.

SELF ASSESSMENT QUESTION: Which of the following findings is the most appropriate target for an antimicrobial stewardship intervention in adult patients discharged from the ED with SSTIs at our institution?

Moderators Presenters
avatar for Caroline Cullen

Caroline Cullen

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at Cambridge Health Alliance
I am Caroline Cullen, PharmD, RPh and I am currently a PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at Cambridge Health Alliance in Cambridge, Massachusetts. I completed pharmacy school and obtained my PharmD at Northeastern University in Boston, MA. I am a current member of the American Society of Health-System... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 2

8:40am EDT

Impact of pharmacist-reviewed discharge medication lists on patients admitted with sepsis
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Authors: Lexi Barbush, PharmD; Sheshadri Hoque, PharmD; Evan Hurley, PharmD, BCIDP 
Learning Objective: Identify common medication errors at discharge in patients initially admitted with sepsis to implement effective pharmacist-led review processes 
Self-Assessment Question:  
True/False Pharmacist intervention led to a decrease in medication errors attributable to readmissions after being hospitalized for sepsis
Background/Objective: Sepsis hospitalizations often require reassessment of chronic medications due to changes in clinical baseline, yet optimization at discharge may be overlooked as focus remains on the acute infection. 
Methods: This was a pre- and post-implementation study that was conducted September 2025 through March 2026. This study included patients ≥18 years old who were hospitalized with sepsis. Patients were excluded if they were discharged to hospice, or left against medical advice. A pharmacist assessed antihypertensives, antimicrobials, antidiabetics, and anticoagulants. Types of interventions involved dose adjustments, discontinuation of duplicate or unindicated therapies, identification of discharge list discrepancies, and initiation of indicated therapies. The primary outcome was 30-day readmissions in patients with reviewed discharge lists versus unreviewed discharge lists. Secondary outcomes included types of interventions and the number of accepted vs rejected interventions. 
Results: Preliminary results for January through February 2026 show that the readmission rate in unreviewed patients is 21% vs 13% in the reviewed patient group (p=0.2). The most common intervention type was adding a medication at discharge and most interventions were concerning antihypertensives. The most frequently rejected intervention was removing an antimicrobial from the discharge list, as providers preferred to extend therapy past IDSA guidelines recommended durations. Most notably, of the reviewed patients who were readmitted (n=11), zero were due to reasons relating to the pre-defined drug classes and the disease states they manage versus 9 of the 50 readmitted patients in the pre-implementation group.
Conclusion: Preliminary data demonstrates that in patients initially admitted with sepsis, the pharmacist-reviewed group had a lower readmission rate compared to non-reviewed patients (13% vs 21%, p=0.2). The pharmacist-review process led to a decrease in readmissions attributable to errors in the pre-defined drug classes or the disease states they target compared to Phase I readmitted patients (0% vs 18%).
Moderators
EJ

Eun Jin Park

RPD, Johns Hopkins Howard County Medical Center
Presenters Evaluators
UT

Unable to Attend

Organizers to assign a new evaluator.
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 3

8:40am EDT

Resident Presentation - Roxy Vassighi
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Moderators
avatar for Patrick Huffman

Patrick Huffman

Residency Program Director, Beckley VAMC
Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 1

8:40am EDT

Evaluation of beta-lactam allergies to improve prescribing practices in hospitalized and surgical patients
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Authors: Kyle Greenfield PharmD, Carina Mackarey Pharm D

Learning Objective: At the completion of this presentation, the participant will be able to identify components of pharmacist-led beta-lactam allergy assessment that support appropriate antibiotic selection.

Background: Many reported beta-lactam allergies represent low-to-moderate risk reactions that limit first-line therapy. This project evaluated whether pharmacist-led assessments could clarify allergy histories and support appropriate antibiotic selection.

Self-Assessment Question: Which finding most strongly supports safe beta-lactam use in a patient with a documented penicillin allergy?

Methods: This prospective quality improvement project was conducted at the Wilkes-Barre VA Medical Center from November 2025 through February 2026. Patients admitted to our medical unit (4E), ICU, or those scheduled for surgical procedures with a documented beta-lactam allergy were identified for pharmacist assessment. Patients were interviewed either in person during hospitalization or by phone prior to surgery to clarify the causative beta-lactam, the type of reaction, and any prior tolerance to other beta-lactams. VA and external pharmacy records were reviewed to identify previous beta-lactam exposures. Findings were documented in a standardized “Beta-lactam Allergy Assessment Note” and allergy records were updated when appropriate to support future antibiotic selection.
 
Results: A total of 42 patients with documented beta-lactam allergy labels were assessed including 10 surgical patients. Penicillin allergy labels were present in 36 patients (86%). All 10 surgical patients received clindamycin for prophylaxis; however, 5 (50%) had documented prior beta-lactam tolerance and could have safely received cefazolin. Following assessment, 9 patients (21%) had their allergies de-labeled, 30 (72%) were eligible for an oral amoxicillin challenge, and 3 (7%) required continued beta-lactam avoidance. Most patients (81%) had low-to-moderate risk reactions. Prior tolerance of at least one beta-lactam antibiotic was identified in 32 patients (76%) and 40 patients (95%) reported reactions occurring more than 10 years prior.

Conclusion: Pharmacist-led beta-lactam allergy assessment identified opportunities to clarify inaccurate allergy labels and support development of an oral amoxicillin challenge protocol. Most hospitalized patients were receiving appropriate beta-lactam therapy; however, opportunities to optimize pre-operative antibiotic selection were identified. Incorporating structured allergy evaluations into antimicrobial stewardship workflow may improve access to first-line therapies and optimize prescribing practices.
Moderators
avatar for Amber Carter

Amber Carter

Residency Program Coordinator/Clinical Pharmacist, UK King's Daughters Medical Center
I am a 2021 graduate of Marshall University School of Pharmacy in Huntington, WV and I completed PGY1 residency at King's Daughters Medical Center in Ashland, KY in 2022. After completing residency, I accepted a position as a staff/clinical pharmacist at King's Daughters and later... Read More →
Presenters
avatar for Kyle Greenfield

Kyle Greenfield

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, VA Medical Center
Hello, I am Kyle Greenfield, a PGY1 Pharmacy Resident at the Wilkes-Barre VA Medical Center. I graduated from Wilkes University in 2025 with my PharmD. Following residency, I will be working as an Acute Care Clinical Pharmacist at Geisinger Wyoming Valley.
Evaluators
avatar for Amy Cook

Amy Cook

Critical Care/Trauma Clinical Specialist, HCA Henrico Doctors’ Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 4

8:40am EDT

Midodrine use in hospitalized patients: a retrospective evaluation of prescribing practices and discharge continuation at a community hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Title:
Midodrine use in hospitalized patients: a retrospective evaluation of prescribing practices and discharge continuation at a community hospital
Authors:
Harshini D Sobhan, PharmD, MSHS, Ruxandra Necula-Lee, PharmD, Maricelle Monteagudo-Chu, PharmD, BCIDP, BCPS, Shamsul Islam, PharmD, MBA
Learning Objective:
Audience members will be able to evaluate inpatient prescribing practices of midodrine and identify opportunities for optimization of use and improved transitions of care.
Background:
Midodrine is approved for symptomatic orthostatic hypotension, is frequently used off-label. This study evaluates indications, dosing, frequency, and duration of use, comparing new inpatient initiation versus continuation from home and at discharge.
Methods:
Retrospective chart review of adult patients (at least 18years old) admitted to the hospital, with an active inpatient midodrine order during January 1, 2025, to March 31, 2025. Excluded patients were seen in the Emergency Department and not admitted as inpatients, midodrine use less than 24 hours, and those who had additional visits during the study period. Data collected included demographics, indication for use, initiation type, duration of therapy, and discharge continuation. Descriptive statistics summarize patient and prescribing characteristics. Primary outcome is to evaluate the frequency of midodrine use based on indication, distinguishing between new inpatient start and home-medication continuation. Secondary outcome is to evaluate the duration of therapy, continuation of use at discharge and baseline systolic blood pressure prior to first dose for standing hypotension orders. 
Results:
A total of 179 patient charts were reviewed, with 119 patients included. The most common indications for midodrine use were hypotension outside the ICU (59.2%) and ICU hypotension for vasopressor sparing (29.4%). The average duration of therapy was 8.62 days + 9.77. Midodrine was used prior to admission in 31.9% of patients and newly initiated in 68.1%, with 40.7% of new starts occurring in the ICU. Among newly initiated patients, 22.2% continued therapy at discharge, including 12.1% of ICU patients. For hypotension orders outside the ICU, 74.6% were standing and 25.4% were as needed. Among standing orders, 87.2% had a specified systolic blood pressure (SBP) ≤ 120 mmHg, while 12.8%  specified SBP > 120 mmHg prior to start of therapy.
Conclusions:
Midodrine is commonly used to treat hypotension in the ICU and non-ICU settings. In our study, at least 20% of patients who started on midodrine during hospitalization were continued on therapy at discharge. We observed various ranges of blood pressure parameters within midodrine orders outside of the ICU settings, highlighting the importance of improved transitions of care. Further evaluation is needed to determine if standardization of parameters within the midodrine record is warranted.
 
 
Self-Assessment Question
Which pharmacist-driven strategy is best supported by this study to improve safe and appropriate inpatient midodrine use?
A. Encouraging routine continuation of midodrine at discharge for all ICU-started patients
B. Performing medication reconciliation with targeted reassessment of midodrine indication and duration
C. Limiting midodrine initiation to nephrology consults only
D. Avoiding midodrine use in patients with any history of hypotension
Moderators
CL

Carol Luong

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Health
Presenters
avatar for Harshini Sobhan

Harshini Sobhan

Pharmacy Resident, Mather Hospital

I'm currently a PGY1 pharmacy resident at Mather Hospital. I earned my Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Touro College of Pharmacy in New York in 2025. During residency, I participated in medication education and safety initiatives, workflow improvement projects, and interdisciplinary pat... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 8:40am - 9:00am EDT
Room 7

9:00am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Moderators Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 2

9:00am EDT

Comparing all-cause hospitalizations in older adults initiated on oxybutynin versus mirabegron for overactive bladder
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Authors: Samarah Wallace, PharmD; Ronald Carico Jr, PharmD, MPH; Rachele Subik, PharmD

Background/Objective: The purpose of this study is to compare the incidence of all-cause hospitalizations in patients aged 65 and older who are newly initiated on oxybutynin versus mirabegron for the treatment of overactive bladder over their first 3-months of treatment. 

Methods: This is a retrospective study comparing the incidence of all-cause hospitalizations in patients aged 65 and older who are newly initiated on oxybutynin versus mirabegron for the treatment of overactive bladder or a related condition over their first 3-months of treatment. Secondary outcomes include emergency department visits within the first year not leading to hospitalizations and initiation of a medication with potential to have been started due to an adverse event caused by oxybutynin or mirabegron. Patients were pulled from Marshall Health Internal Medicine’s electronic health record, and demographics and outcomes were assessed using the t-test or Fisher’s exact.

Results: The study assessed 338 patients over 65-years-old. 73% of the participants were female with 82% in the mirabegron arm and 66% being in the oxybutynin arm. 97% of participants were white with even distribution between both arms. The primary outcome was observed in 1% of patients in the mirabegron group and 7% in the oxybutynin group. Patients with oxybutynin had a 6-fold increased risk of hospitalization within the first 3 months. The secondary outcome for all-cause emergency department visits not resulting in a hospitalization within the first year of treatment was found to be non-significant. However, statistical significance was seen when assessing initiation of treatment for suspected adverse drug reactions to mirabegron or oxybutynin.

Conclusion: When evaluating patients 65-years-old and older who are receiving treatment with oxybutynin or mirabegron for overactive bladder, mirabegron demonstrates superior outcomes. Mirabegron, compared head-to head with oxybutynin, demonstrated a reduced incidence of adverse outcomes resulting in visits to the emergency department, hospital admissions, and the initiation of a medication that may have been started due to an adverse event.



Moderators
IC

Imran Chughtai

Critical Care Specialist and PGY-1 Residency Program Director, Holy Cross Hospital
Presenters Evaluators
avatar for Donna Grant

Donna Grant

Clinical Pharmacist, Elliot Hospital
I have worked at the Elliot Hospital for over 20 years. I work all over the hospital - medical floors, PEDI/NICU and our Cancer Center. Really enjoy the variety. I have been a preceptor for about 3 and 1/2 years and have really enjoyed precepting our residents especially this yea... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 6

9:00am EDT

Evaluation of propofol safety in critically ill obese adult patients
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Title: Evaluation of propofol safety in critically ill obese adult patients

Authors: Emilia Pieta, PharmD; Rita Jamil, PharmD; Brittany Tyree, PharmD, MS, BCCCP

Objective: Audience members will be able to assess how increasing BMI influences the risk of propofol-associated hemodynamic adverse effects in ICU patients.

Self-Assessment Question: True or False. Propofol used for the maintenance of sedation in the ICU was associated with a higher incidence of the composite outcome of hypotension or bradycardia in obese patients compared to non-obese patients.

Background: Given propofol’s lipophilicity and hemodynamic adverse effects, evaluation of the safety of propofol administered via continuous infusion for sedation in obese (BMI ≥30 kg/m2) versus non-obese (BMI <30 kg/m2) critically ill patients is warranted.

Methods: This single-center, retrospective study at UVA Health University Hospital included adults admitted to the medical ICU that received propofol continuous infusion for sedation for ≥12 hours between January 1, 2022 and May 31, 2025. Exclusions were a diagnosis of COVID-19; concomitant continuous infusion of benzodiazepine, dexmedetomidine, ketamine, or neuromuscular blocking agent; changes in dosing weight strategy during infusion; propofol administration in the operating room; or RASS goal >0 or <-2. The primary composite endpoint was incidence of new hypotension or bradycardia. Secondary safety endpoints included individual components of the composite outcome, peak triglyceride level, ICU length of stay, and in-hospital mortality. Secondary efficacy endpoints included time to first goal RASS, propofol infusion rate at first goal RASS, and incidence of self-extubation. A subgroup analysis was performed comparing patients with BMI 30 to <35 versus BMI ≥35.

Results: A total of 539 patients were screened; 100 patients were included (50 patients in the obese group). Baseline characteristics were similar, except heart failure was more common in obese patients. The incidence of new hypotension or bradycardia occurred in 46 non-obese versus 41 obese patients (p=0.137). Time to first event was 2.5 versus 1 hour (p=0.849). No significant differences were seen in peak triglycerides, ICU length of stay, in-hospital mortality, RASS outcomes, or self-extubation. Subgroup analysis showed higher incidence of new hypotension or bradycardia in BMI ≥35 kg/m2 (n=35) than BMI 30 to <35 kg/m2 (n=15) (26 vs. 15; p=0.043).

Conclusion: No significant difference was observed in the incidence of new hypotension or bradycardia between obese and non-obese patients. Time to first incidence of new hypotension or bradycardia was longer in non-obese patients, despite no significant difference. These results suggest that obesity is not associated with a higher incidence of hemodynamic adverse effects of propofol compared to non-obese patients.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Emilia Pieta

Emilia Pieta

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, University of Virginia Health
I am originally from the Chicago area and earned my PharmD from the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy. I am staying on at UVA to complete a PGY2 in Critical Care.
Evaluators
avatar for Bi Kim

Bi Kim

Internal Medicine Clinical Pharmacist Practitioner, Washington DCVA Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 5

9:00am EDT

Safety and Effectiveness of Colchicine for Prevention of Post-Operative Atrial Fibrillation after Cardiothoracic Surgery
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Authors: Ngan Le, PharmD; Lauren Albertina, PharmD, BCCCP; Kimberly Hall, PharmD, BCCP, BCPS 

Learning Objective: Audience members will be able to explain the role of colchicine in the prevention of post-operative atrial fibrillation (POAF) following cardiothoracic surgery. 

Background/Objective: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the addition of colchicine to institutional standard of amiodarone and beta blocker therapy for the prevention of POAF in patients who have undergone cardiothoracic surgery. 

Methods: This single-center retrospective cohort study was conducted at Inova Fairfax Medical Campus. Adults (≥18 years) undergoing cardiothoracic surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass were included. Exclusion criteria were renal dysfunction, acute kidney injury, transaminitis, chronic liver disease, congenital heart disease, or colchicine use for other indications. The colchicine group consisted of patients from January-June 2025 who received colchicine 0.6 mg twice daily starting on postoperative day two. The control group consisted of patients from January-June 2024 who did not receive colchicine post-operatively. The primary outcome was the incidence of POAF. Secondary outcomes included the incidence of post-operative pericarditis, postpericardiotomy syndrome, and post-operative ileus. Safety outcomes included any events warranting colchicine dose reduction or discontinuation. Categorical variables were analyzed via two-sided Fisher’s exact or Pearson Chi-square tests where appropriate. 

Results: Over the pre-specified periods, 160 patients were included (colchicine n= 81, control n= 79). As part of the institutional POAF prophylaxis protocol, 84.4% of patients received amiodarone and 88.1% received beta blockers. POAF occurred in 19 patients (23.5%) in the colchicine group and in 23 patients (29.11%) in the control group (p=0.42). The median onset of POAF was three days after surgery. Secondary outcomes showed no difference in the incidence of post-operative pericarditis, postpericardiotomy syndrome, and post-operative ileus. Colchicine dose reduction occurred in 4.9% of patients, and discontinuation occurred in 21.0% of patients, most commonly due to diarrhea. 

Conclusions: Among patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery, the addition of colchicine to institutional standard amiodarone and beta blocker therapy did not significantly reduce the incidence of POAF. Diarrhea was the most common adverse event leading to colchicine dose reduction or discontinuation. The study limitations included retrospective study design and limited sample size.  

Self-Assessment Question: According to our study, colchicine showed reduced incidence of post-operative atrial fibrillation in patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery (True/False) 

Moderators Presenters
avatar for Ngan Le

Ngan Le

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, Inova Fairfax Medical Campus
Ngan Le, PharmD, is a PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at Inova Fairfax Medical Campus in Falls Church, Virginia. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from University of Illinois Retzky College of Pharmacy in 2025. Upon completion of this residency year, she plans to pursue a clinical... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Sarah Siemion

Sarah Siemion

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center
Dr. Siemion is a graduate of the Nesbitt School of Pharmacy at Wilkes University. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy in 2010. She then completed a PGY1 pharmacy residency at Orlando Regional Medical Center. After completion of her residency, she accepted a position at Geisinger Wyoming... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 8

9:00am EDT

Resident Presentation - Eric Dodgson
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Evaluating the effect of parenteral phosphate dose on serum phosphorus level in pediatric patients

Eric Dodson, PharmD, Amanda Clouser, PharmD, BCPPS, Pooja Shah, PharmD, BCPPS, Molly Siver, PharmD, BCOP

Learning Objective
At the conclusion of my presentation, participants will be able to describe the effect of parenteral phosphate supplementation dose on serum phosphorus levels in the pediatric patient population.
Objective
This study is designed to evaluate the effect of parenteral phosphate dosing on serum phosphate concentration by evaluating current dosing practices 
Background/Objective
There is a current paucity of data regarding the dosing of parenteral phosphate in the pediatric patient population. 
Methods
This is a single center retrospective chart review evaluating infants, children and adolescents admitted in a children’s hospital within an adult institution who received parenteral intermittent sodium or potassium phosphate from August 2012 - August 2025. The primary outcome is to evaluate the effect of parenteral phosphate dose on the change in serum phosphorus concentration in the pediatric patient population. Secondary outcomes include the need for resupplementation within 24 hours of a repeat phosphorus level, the number of doses and amount of time required to achieve a serum phosphorus level > 2 mg/dL and the incidence of hyperphosphatemia as a result of current parenteral phosphate dosing strategies.
Results
Of the 152 patients screened, 109 patients were included in the study across 164 administrations of parenteral phosphate. The mean change in serum phosphorus (SD) for the entire study population was  0.53 mg/dL (± 0.98). The mean change in serum phosphorus in the low, medium, high, and very high dose groups were 0.65 mg/dL (± 0.71), 0.53 mg/dL (± 0.78), 1.05 mg/dL (± 1.07), and 1.59 mg/dL (± 1.66) respectively. Persistent hypophosphatemia occurred in 134 (81.8%) administrations, while hyperphosphatemia occurred in 4 (2.4%) of administrations.
Conclusion
Statistical analysis for this study is still ongoing, though descriptive statistics for the primary outcome appear to show a linear relationship between parenteral phosphorus dose and change in serum phosphorus concentration. Given the high rates of persistent hypophosphatemia seen in this study across all dosing ranges, it may be appropriate to consider higher phosphate dosing in the pediatric population, however, further studies may be needed to elucidate the ideal dosing regimen based on serum phosphorus level.
Self-Assessment Question
Which of the following medication classes are a major risk factor for the development of hypophosphatemia? Select all that apply.
Moderators
CL

Carol Luong

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Health
Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 7

9:00am EDT

Systemic corticosteroids with or without stress ulcer prophylaxis: a retrospective comparative analysis of gastrointestinal bleeding risk and adverse outcomes
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Title: Systemic corticosteroids with or without stress ulcer prophylaxis: a retrospective comparative analysis of gastrointestinal bleeding risk and adverse outcomes

Authors: Sara Girgis, PharmD; Shivankar Vajinepalli, PharmD; Megan Trombi, PharmD; Yong-Bum Song, PharmD

Objective: The audience will be able to compare the risk of stress-related gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB) in hospitalized patients receiving systemic corticosteroids (SCS) with and without stress ulcer prophylaxis (SUP).

Self-Assessment Question:
True/false: The 2024 Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) Guideline for the Prevention of Stress-Related GIB in Critically Ill Adults considers SCS a risk factor for stress-related GIB that necessitates SUP. 

Background:
Evidence correlating SCS and GIB is limited, and current guidelines do not recommend SUP for patients receiving SCS. This study aimed to evaluate whether coadministration of SUP is associated with a lower incidence of GIB in patients receiving SCS.

Methods: This single-center, retrospective chart review included patients aged 18 years or older who received SCS for at least 24 hours, with or without coadministration of SUP such as pantoprazole or famotidine. Patients with active GIB upon admission or with risk factors for GIB who required SUP, were excluded. The primary outcome compared the incidence of clinically important GIB between the cohorts. The secondary outcomes assessed the occurrence of adverse effects associated with SUP, including newly confirmed pneumonia, Clostridium difficile, and change in platelet count. 

Results: The analysis included 412 patients, of whom 176 received SCS along with SUP and 236 received SCS alone. Among those patients, clinically significant GIB was observed in one patient (0.4%) from the SCS-alone group (p > 0.99). Newly confirmed pneumonia developed in 14 patients overall, consisting of 4 patients (3.4%) in the SCS + SUP group and 10 patients (4.2%) in the SCS-alone group (p = 0.28). There were no reported cases of Clostridium difficile in either cohort. The median change in platelet count for the SCS + SUP group was -15, whereas the SCS-alone group was -13 (p = 0.31).


Conclusions: The use of SUP was not associated with a lower incidence of clinically significant GIB among patients receiving SCS. The incidence of newly confirmed pneumonia, Clostridium difficile infection, and change in platelet count were not significantly different between the cohorts. Future research involving larger sample sizes is essential to further assess whether SUP is associated with a lower incidence of clinically significant GIB in this patient population.
Moderators
EJ

Eun Jin Park

RPD, Johns Hopkins Howard County Medical Center
Presenters
avatar for Sara Girgis

Sara Girgis

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, JFK University Medical Center
Sara Girgis, PharmD is a PGY-1 pharmacy resident at JFK University Medical Center (JFKUMC) in Edison, NJ. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy in 2025 from Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy at Rutgers University, New Brunswick. After completing her PGY-1 residency, she will continue... Read More →
Evaluators
UT

Unable to Attend

Organizers to assign a new evaluator.
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 3

9:00am EDT

Assessing clinical impact of coagulase-negative staphylococci blood cultures determined to be contaminants
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Title: Assessing clinical impact of coagulase-negative staphylococci blood cultures determined to be contaminants 
 
Authors: Morgan Mendes, PharmD; Michael Miller, PharmD, BCPS, BCIDP 
 
Objective: Identify appropriate antimicrobial stewardship strategies when coagulase-negative staphylococci blood cultures are determined to be contaminants. 
 
Self-Assessment Question: Which antimicrobial stewardship strategy is most appropriate when a positive blood culture is determined to be a contaminant in a clinically stable patient with no signs of infection? 
A. Continue vancomycin until repeat cultures are negative 
B. De-escalate or discontinue vancomycin after culture review 
C. Add gram-negative coverage 
D. Switch to daptomycin 
 
Background: Blood cultures are a tool for diagnosing sepsis, yet 1-2% represent contamination. Treating contaminants as true infections can lead to unnecessary antibiotic use and increased healthcare costs. 
 
Methods: This retrospective cohort study evaluated adults admitted to TidalHealth Peninsula Regional between October 1, 2023, and October 1, 2025, with a single positive blood culture for coagulase-negative staphylococci from the emergency department. Patients with risk factors for true bacteremia were excluded. The primary objective was to compare hospital length of stay between patients who continued vancomycin and those who did not receive or were de-escalated from vancomycin within 24 hours of contaminant culture identification. Length of stay was analyzed using a Mann–Whitney U test. Secondary outcomes included incidence of acute kidney injury and new infectious disease consults, analyzed using a Fisher’s exact or chi-square test as appropriate. 
 
Results: Of 449 patients reviewed, 281 met inclusion criteria. Median hospital length of stay was significantly shorter in the de-escalation group compared to the continued vancomycin group (2-day difference, 95% CI 1–3; p < 0.001). No patients in the de-escalation group experienced acute kidney injury compared to three patients in the continued group (0% vs 3.5%; p = 0.30). New infectious disease consults within 72 hours occurred more frequently in patients who continued vancomycin (34%) compared to those de-escalated (24.6%, p < 0.001). 
 
Conclusion: Early avoidance or de-escalation of vancomycin in patients with blood culture contaminants may reduce unnecessary antibiotic exposure and hospital length of stay. These findings support antimicrobial stewardship strategies focused on early culture review and targeted de-escalation. 
Moderators
avatar for Amber Carter

Amber Carter

Residency Program Coordinator/Clinical Pharmacist, UK King's Daughters Medical Center
I am a 2021 graduate of Marshall University School of Pharmacy in Huntington, WV and I completed PGY1 residency at King's Daughters Medical Center in Ashland, KY in 2022. After completing residency, I accepted a position as a staff/clinical pharmacist at King's Daughters and later... Read More →
Presenters
avatar for Morgan Mendes

Morgan Mendes

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, TidalHealth Peninsula Regional
Morgan Mendes, PharmD, is a PGY1 Pharmacy Resident at TidalHealth Peninsula Regional in Salisbury, MD. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of South Carolina College of Pharmacy where she developed interests in infectious diseases and oncology and previously... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Amy Cook

Amy Cook

Critical Care/Trauma Clinical Specialist, HCA Henrico Doctors’ Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 4

9:00am EDT

Evaluating the appropriateness of venous thromboembolism prophylaxis prescribing in newly diagnosed ambulatory patients with cancer
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Title: Evaluation of guideline-directed venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in high-risk ambulatory cancer patients
Authors: Srivishnu Vardhan Parasaram, PharmD; Julie Shupp, PharmD, BCOP; Jorge Aguilera, PharmD, BCPS
Learning Objective: Audience members will be able to evaluate institutional adherence to NCCN/ASCO guideline-directed venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis in ambulatory cancer patients.
Background/Objective: Cancer-associated thrombosis is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in oncology patients. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) and American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) guidelines recommend consideration of VTE prophylaxis for high-risk ambulatory cancer patients initiating systemic chemotherapy, defined by a Khorana Score of 2 or greater. This study aimed to determine the rate of appropriate VTE prophylaxis prescribing at John R. Marsh Cancer Center within Meritus Health and to evaluate associated clinical outcomes.
Methods: This retrospective observational study evaluated adults aged 18 and older presenting with a new cancer diagnosis and initiating chemotherapy at John R. Marsh Cancer Center between January 1, 2024 and December 31, 2024. Baseline Khorana Scores were calculated to stratify VTE risk. Patients were excluded if they were receiving therapeutic anticoagulation for a pre-existing condition (e.g., atrial fibrillation, secondary prophylaxis), had a documented absolute contraindication to anticoagulation, were pregnant, or received treatment exclusively at an outside facility. The primary outcome was the rate of appropriate VTE prophylaxis prescribing based on NCCN guidelines. Secondary outcomes included the incidence of VTE events, major bleeding events, and all-cause mortality, stratified by Khorana Score, management appropriateness, and metastatic status.
Results: A total of 167 patient charts were included for analysis. Guideline-adherent VTE prophylaxis management was observed in 67.1% of patients (n=112), with 55 patients (32.9%) managed inappropriately based on their baseline Khorana Score. Of the entire cohort, only 3 patients (1.8%) were prescribed pharmacologic thromboprophylaxis, reflecting a very low overall prescribing rate despite the high proportion of high-risk patients. VTE events occurred in 9.8% (n=11) of appropriately managed patients compared to 25.5% (n=14) of inappropriately managed patients, a statistically significant difference (p=0.015; RR 2.60, 95% CI 1.27–5.33). Patients with a Khorana Score ≥2 experienced VTE at a rate of 24.6% compared to 10.0% in low-risk patients (p=0.023; RR 2.46, 95% CI 1.19–5.06). Major bleeding events occurred in 3.0% of the overall cohort (n=5); no statistically significant differences were observed across any subgroup, though the analysis was limited by the low event count. All-cause mortality occurred in 24.0% of the cohort (n=40), with significantly higher rates observed in patients with a Khorana Score ≥2 (36.8% vs. 17.3%, p=0.009) and in inappropriately managed patients (38.2% vs. 17.0%, p=0.005).
Conclusion: Adherence to NCCN/ASCO VTE prophylaxis guidelines at our institution was 67.1%, with an overall pharmacologic prophylaxis prescribing rate of only 1.8%, suggesting that guideline-concordant management in this population is largely driven by appropriate withholding of prophylaxis in low-risk patients rather than active prescribing in high-risk patients. Inappropriately managed patients experienced significantly higher rates of VTE, demonstrating the clinical consequences of non-adherence. All-cause mortality differences across subgroups likely reflect underlying cancer burden and disease severity rather than VTE-attributable death, as cause of death was not captured. While provider hesitance regarding anticoagulation is understandable given bleeding risk and potential treatment delays, this study highlights a meaningful quality improvement opportunity. The occurrence of VTE in low-scoring patients and variable outcomes among high-scoring patients also suggest the Khorana Score alone may have limited precision in this population, underscoring the need for prospective evaluation and potentially more individualized risk stratification tools.
Moderators
avatar for Patrick Huffman

Patrick Huffman

Residency Program Director, Beckley VAMC
Presenters
avatar for Srivishnu Parasaram

Srivishnu Parasaram

Current PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at Meritus Medical Center in Hagerstown, MD. My practice interests include Oncology and Infectious Disease. 
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:00am - 9:20am EDT
Room 1

9:30am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 2

9:30am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 1

9:30am EDT

Alcohol use disorder identification test consumption score changes in patients on glucagon-like peptide-1 and glucagon-like peptide-1/glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide agonists
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Title
Alcohol use disorder identification test consumption score changes in patients on glucagon-like peptide-1 and glucagon-like peptide-1/glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide agonists

Authors
Sarah Alleva, PharmD; Jocelyn Mumbulo, PharmD, BCCP; Sara Skoritowski, PharmD

Learning objective
At the conclusion of my presentation, the participant will be able to describe the potential effect of GLP-1 and GLP-1/GIP agonist therapy on alcohol consumption as measured by changes in AUDIT-C scores.

Background
Preclinical studies and observational data show that GLP-1 and GLP-1/GIP dual agonists may help in the reduction of alcohol consumption.

Assessment Question:
Based on the findings of this study, which patient population may derive the greatest dual benefit from GLP-1 or GLP-1/GIP agonist therapy?
-Patients with alcohol use disorder alone
-Patients with diabetes or obesity and concurrent alcohol use
-Patients with depression without metabolic disease
-Patients without alcohol use

Methods
This single‑center, retrospective chart‑review quality‑improvement project used data from the Computerized Patient Record System (CPRS) at the Wilkes‑Barre Veterans Affairs Medical Center to identify patients with diabetes or obesity, a positive Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test–Consumption (AUDIT‑C) score, and who were prescribed an injectable glucagon‑like peptide‑1 receptor agonist (GLP-1) or a dual GLP‑1/GIP agonist between October 2022 and December 2024. Patients were excluded if they had a negative baseline AUDIT‑C score, received therapy for less than one month, or were under 18 years old. The primary outcome was the change in alcohol use from baseline to follow‑up, measured by the AUDIT‑C score. Secondary outcomes included evaluating whether age influenced alcohol‑use reduction and comparing BMI changes between diabetes‑focused and weight‑loss–focused patients.

Results
A total of 111 charts were reviewed, and 46 patients met inclusion criteria. 65 patients were excluded due to one of the following: negative or missing baseline AUDIT‑C scores, therapy started outside the Wilkes‑Barre VA, outside the study timeframe, or therapy under one month. The primary outcome was a change in AUDIT-C score, which decreased by 43% at initial follow‑up and 57% at second follow-up. Secondary outcomes demonstrated a decrease in AUDIT‑C scores for both age groups, with reductions of 43% and 57% at the first and second follow‑up, among those aged 18–64, and 40% and 60% among those aged 65–99. BMI decreased by 8% in weight‑loss patients and 4% in diabetes patients.

Conclusion
Based on the results of this QA‑QI project, there was a decrease in AUDIT-C scores in patients receiving GLP‑1 or GLP‑1/GIP therapy, suggesting a possible association between these agents and decreased alcohol consumption.  
Moderators
BS

Brandon Smith

Clinical Pharmacy Specialist - Medical ICU, Howard University Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Sarah Alleva

Sarah Alleva

Pharmacy Resident, Wilkes-Barre VA Medical Center
Sarah Alleva PharmD, PGY-1 Resident at the Wilkes-Barre VA Medical Center16 years of pharmacy experience as a Senior Certified Pharmacy Technician Graduated in 2025 from the University of Georgia College of Pharmacy Upon completion of residency, I hope to transition into an ambulatory... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Brandon Snyder

Brandon Snyder

Residency Program Director, Pharmacist IV, WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital
I received my Bachelor's degree in Biology from Temple University, followed by my PharmD at the Jefferson College of Pharmacy in Philadelphia. I completed PGY-1 residency training at Penn State Health St Joseph. I have completed board certification in pharmacotherapy and the SIDP... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 6

9:30am EDT

Association of loop diuretic optimization at discharge with 30-day readmission rates in acute decompensated heart failure
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Authors
Sunkyu Han PharmD; Emily Gill PharmD, BCCCP; Bethany Rennie PharmD 
 
Learning Objective  
Compare all-cause 30-day readmission rates for patients hospitalized with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) who are discharged on optimized versus non-optimized loop diuretic doses. 
 
Self-Assessment Question
For patients who are admitted for ADHF on a loop diuretic prior to admission, what diuretic intervention may reduce the risk of 30-day readmission?
A. Maintain patients on the same loop diuretic dose
B. Switch to another class of diuretics
C. Increase the loop diuretic dose and discharge patients on the higher dose
D. Decrease the loop diuretic dose and discharge patients on the lower dose

Background/Objective
Loop diuretics are the therapy of choice for symptom management in ADHF. The objective of this study was to identify whether optimization of loop diuretic dose at hospital discharge lowers the risk of 30-day all-cause hospital readmission.  
 
Methods
This was a multicenter, retrospective cohort study. Adult patients admitted to the hospital due to ADHF between 12/1/2023 and 12/31/2024 were included if they had a left ventricular ejection fraction ≤40% and were prescribed a loop diuretic prior to admission (PTA). Patients who received renal replacement therapy, were admitted to the intensive care unit, or died during the admission were excluded. Patients were divided into 2 groups: diuretic dose optimized (discharged on a higher dose than the PTA dose) and non-optimized (discharged on the same or decreased dose than the PTA dose). The primary outcome was 30-day all-cause readmission. Secondary outcomes were 30-day heart failure readmission and 30-day mortality. Descriptive statistics were utilized to summarize the study variables, and a multivariable logistic regression model was constructed to identify the association between baseline characteristics and 30-day all-cause readmission. 
 
Results  
A total of 300 patients were included in the study; 130 in the optimized dose group and 170 in the non-optimized dose group. Diuretic optimization was associated with a significantly lower rate of 30-day all-cause hospital readmission compared to non-optimization (21.6% versus 43.7%; p=0.01). The rate of 30-day heart failure readmission was also significantly lower in the optimized group compared to the non-optimized group (8.5% versus 16.5%; p=0.04), but 30-day mortality was similar between groups (3.1% versus 1.8%; p=0.46). Diuretic dose optimization on discharge was independently associated with a lower risk of 30-day all-cause hospital readmission (OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.33-0.95, p=0.03). 
 
Conclusion
For patients hospitalized due to ADHF, diuretic dose optimization at discharge may decrease the risk of 30-day all-cause hospital readmission. However, due to the small sample size and retrospective design of this study, larger, randomized, prospective studies should be conducted to further validate these findings.
Moderators
avatar for Michelle Kohute

Michelle Kohute

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Jersey Shore University Medical Center
Michelle Kohute, PharmD, BCCCP, earned her Bachelor of Science degree from the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy at Rutgers University in 1996 and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Rhode Island in 1998. She completed an American Society of Health-System Pharmacists... Read More →
Presenters Evaluators
avatar for Sara Skoritowski

Sara Skoritowski

Clinical pharmacy practitioner, Veterans Affairs
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 5

9:30am EDT

Development of a specialty pharmacy electronic order set in reproductive endocrinology
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Title: Development of a specialty pharmacy electronic order set in reproductive endocrinology

Authors:
Shekinah Banson, PharmD, MS, Kamaria Cayton Vaught, MD, Lauren Lakdawala, PharmD, BCACP, Jennifer Costello, MSN, RN, C-EFM, Emmanuel Vasilarakis, PharmD, BCACP, Nolan Kauffman, PharmD, Amy Nathanson, PharmD, BCACP, Molly Wascher, PharmD, MBA, BCPS

Learning Objective:
Describe challenges in fertility medication ordering and dispensing that aid in the development of an Epic SmartSet for reproductive endocrinology and infertility (REI).

Self-Assessment Question: 
What current challenges are associated with manual fertility medication ordering among providers and pharmacists, and how can a standardized SmartSet be a solution?

A. The absence of an Epic SmartSet leads to manual, inconsistent ordering, increasing workloads and delaying patient care; a standardized SmartSet can improve order accuracy and efficiency
B. Variability in patient response to fertility medications requires frequent dose adjustments; individualized clinical decision-making limits the usefulness of standardized SmartSet
C. The complexity of fertility treatment protocols necessitates flexibility, provider-specific ordering approaches; standardized order sets may restrict clinical autonomy and adaptability
D. Insurance coverage and prior authorizations expedite therapy for fertility medicine, a standardized order SmartSet would have minimal impact on these external barriers

Background/Objective:
The absence of an Epic SmartSet for fertility protocols leads to manual, inconsistent ordering, increasing workload, and delaying of patient care. This project aims to improve order accuracy and efficiency for nursing, providers, and pharmacy teams.

Methods: 
This quality improvement project is being conducted at The Johns Hopkins Hospital and Johns Hopkins Green Spring Station (GSS). Baseline data was collected using an anonymous REDCap® survey of providers, nurses, pharmacists, and pharmacy technicians to assess current ordering workflows. Descriptive data on the amount of fertility medication orders from December 1, 2024, to November 30, 2025, was obtained. Survey and prescribing data will inform the development of a standardized Epic SmartSet. The finalized SmartSet will be submitted to Johns Hopkins Reproductive Endocrinology Physician for building and implementation.

Results:
From December 1, 2024, to November 30, 2025, 31,772 fertility medication orders were generated at the GSS REI Clinic. 14,501 of those were sent to Johns Hopkins Outpatient Pharmacies with the majority routed to GSS (11,076), followed by Holabird Specialty Pharmacy (1,807) and Arcade Pharmacy (1,414), with smaller volumes distributed across additional Johns Hopkins outpatient pharmacies. According to the survey, missing or incorrect supplies were the most frequently reported issue by the pharmacy team. Additionally, 67% of the clinical team and 70% of the pharmacy team reported challenges with switching to alternative agents.100% of respondents reported they would be very likely to use a standardized order set.

Conclusion: 
Standardized Epic SmartSets with embedded decision support may address order completeness, provide allowed alternatives, and reduce prescribing ambiguity. This may support more consistent ordering and prescribing practices. The reduction in variability will enhance interdisciplinary workflow, providing a scalable framework for optimizing ordering processes across specialty areas.

Moderators
avatar for Crystal Cleveland

Crystal Cleveland

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Alexandria Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Shekinah Banson

Shekinah Banson

PGY-1 Resident, Johns Hopkins Care at Home
Dr. Shekinah Banson is originally from the San Francisco Bay Area in California. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry from San Francisco State University, her Master of Science in Bioinformatics and Biotechnology from University of Maryland University College, and her... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 8

9:30am EDT

Combination therapy for carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii infections: what is the optimal regimen?
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Title: 
Combination therapy for carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii infections: what is the optimal regimen?
Authors: 
Hyun Ju Abigail Yoon, PharmD; Patrick Lake, PharmD, BCIDP; Siddharth Swamy, PharmD, BCIDP; Yen-Hong Kuo, PhD; Rani Sebti, MD
Objective: 
Audience members will be able to compare treatment outcomes of various multi-drug regimens for infections due to carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.
Self Assessment Question: 
Which of the following are appropriate treatment options for CRAB infections?
A. Sulbactam-durlobactam plus meropenem
B. Ceftriaxone plus azithromycin
C. Cefepime plus metronidazole
D. Piperacillin-tazobactam plus linezolid
Background: 
The objective of this study was to compare the treatment outcomes of sulbactam-durlobactam- and cefiderocol-based combinations for the treatment of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB) infections.
Methods: 
This was a multicenter retrospective study. Patients were included if they were hospitalized between October 2020 and November 2025, had infections due to CRAB, and received one of the following combination antimicrobial regimens as targeted therapy for a minimum of 72 hours. Antimicrobial regimens included sulbactam-durlobactam-based regimens (excluding cefiderocol), and cefiderocol-based regimens (excluding sulbactam-durlobactam). Outcomes were compared in each treatment group. The primary outcome was clinical failure. Clinical failure was defined as in-hospital mortality, an escalation in antimicrobial therapy, or an incomplete duration of therapy. Secondary outcomes included in-hospital mortality, duration of therapy, escalation of therapy, and microbiologic cure (only for bloodstream infections). 
Results:
Of 396 patients screened, 186 were included: 165 in the cefiderocol arm and 21 in the sulbactam-durlobactam arm. Median Charlson Comorbidity Index scores were 6 and 5, respectively, indicating high baseline mortality risk. Pneumonia was the most common infection, followed by bloodstream infections. Cefiderocol monotherapy (67.9%) and sulbactam-durlobactam plus meropenem (61.9%) were the most common regimens. Clinical failure occurred in 20.6% versus 14.3% (p=0.82), respectively. In-hospital mortality was higher in the cefiderocol group (17.6% vs 0%). No significant differences were observed in primary or secondary outcomes.
Conclusion:
There was no significant difference in clinical failure between cefiderocol- and sulbactam-durlobactam-based regimens. However, the cefiderocol arm had a higher rate of in-hospital mortality. Given the mortality imbalance between groups and the predominance of cefiderocol monotherapy, further studies are warranted to evaluate the role of cefiderocol monotherapy versus combination therapy in CRAB infections.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Hyun Ju Yoon

Hyun Ju Yoon

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident
Evaluators
avatar for Christopher Hartley

Christopher Hartley

Pediatric surgery, gastroenterology, and liver transplant; assistant professor department of surgery Johns Hopkins University, The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 7

9:30am EDT

Cost-effectiveness of paliperidone long-acting injectable antipsychotic vs oral second-generation antipsychotics in patients hospitalized for psychosis
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Title: Cost-effectiveness of paliperidone long-acting injectable antipsychotic vs oral second-generation antipsychotics in patients hospitalized for psychosis

Authors: Baylee Beaver, PharmD, MBA; Michaela E. Huddleston, PharmD, BCPS, BCGP, BCPP; Lora Good, PharmD; Patrick Kerr, PhD; Jonathan Robles-Diaz, PharmD; Brian Burton, MS

Background: This study evaluates the true cost-effectiveness of paliperidone long-acting injectable (LAI) in patients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder to guide clinical practice and administrative decisions regarding antipsychotic selection.  

Methods: Medical records of 200 patients admitted to the inpatient psychiatric unit at CAMC General Hospital for schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder from September 1st, 2016, to September 1st, 2024, were reviewed. Data collected included patient demographics, prescribed second-generation antipsychotic information, hospital length of stay (LOS) and cost, number of emergency department (ED) visits and hospital inpatient admissions in the 12-months before and after the index admission, and social determinants of health.

Results: The mean admission cost of patients discharged paliperidone LAIs was lower compared to patients discharged on oral second-generation antipsychotic agents ($76,964.40 vs $43,049.80, p<0.0001). Patients started on paliperidone LAI had longer LOS on the index admission compared to patients on oral second-generation antipsychotics (10.98 days vs 8.69 days, P=0.0001). No difference was identified in the number of readmissions or ED visits between groups. Among patients who were readmitted, there was no difference in LOS between the two groups. 

Conclusions: Paliperidone LAIs were associated with lower admission costs despite the association with a longer length of stay. However, there was no improvement in the rate of readmissions and emergency department visits.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Baylee Beaver

Baylee Beaver

Baylee Beaver, PharmD, MBA
PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at Charleston Area Medical Center
I graduated from the University of Charleston School of Pharmacy in 2025 and am currently completing my PGY-1 Pharmacy Residency at CAMC. Upon completion of my PGY-1, I will be practicing as an Emergency Medicine/Critical Care Clincial Pharmacist... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 3

9:30am EDT

Improving statin utilization in people living with human immunodeficiency virus: a pre- and post-intervention study in a New York city community hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Authors: Tina Lin, PharmD; Eris Cani, BS, PharmD, BCIDP, BCPS; Lendelle Raymond, MS, PharmD, BCIDP, AAHIVP; Cosmina Zeana, MD, MPH; James Lin, PharmD; Kyoung-Sil Kang, PharmD, BCPS, BCOP; Momina Qureshi, PharmD  

Learning Objective: At the conclusion of my presentation, the participant will be able to describe the impact of a provider education on the rate of appropriate statin prescribing for primary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) in people living with HIV (PLWH).

Background/Objective: People living with HIV have an increased risk of ASCVD. Despite guideline updates following the REPRIEVE trial, statins remain underutilized. This study evaluates whether provider education improves appropriate statin prescribing.  

Methods: This quasi-experimental pre–post pilot study used retrospective chart review of people living with HIV at an urban HIV clinic who are eligible for statin therapy per 2024 DHHS guidelines during pre- (January–August 2025) and post-intervention (November 2025–January 2026) periods. Patients aged 40–75 years were assessed for appropriate statin use based on guideline-recommended indications and statin intensity. The intervention included provider education through in-service sessions that reviewed guideline recommendations and key trial data. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients prescribed appropriate statin therapy pre- versus post-intervention. The secondary outcome was adherence to guideline recommendations stratified by the ASCVD risk category. The statistical analysis included descriptive statistics to summarize baseline characteristics and a Chi-square test for categorical data. A p-value of < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.  

Results: A total of 92 patients were included (44 in the pre-intervention group and 48 in the post-intervention group). The proportion of patients receiving appropriate statin therapy increased from 36.4% in the pre-intervention group to 60.4% in the post-intervention group (p= 0.021). When stratified by ASCVD risk category, the intermediate-risk group accounted for the majority of guideline-adherence statin prescribing in both the pre- and post-intervention periods (68.7% and 48.3%, respectively). Notably, statin therapy was initiated among patients in the low ASCVD risk group during the post-intervention period (24%).

Conclusion: The proportion of patients prescribed appropriate statin therapy improved following provider education. These findings support the use of provider education to enhance guideline adherence.  

Self Assessment Question: A 52-year-old Hispanic male with well-controlled HIV on ART presents for routine follow-up. LDL is 78 mg/dL. His estimated 10-year ASCVD risk is 6%. Based on the 2024 DHHS HIV guidelines, should this patient be started on statin therapy?  

A. Yes, statin therapy is indicated
B. No, statin therapy is not indicated
Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters
avatar for Tina Lin

Tina Lin

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, BronxCare Health System
My name is Tina Lin, and I am a PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at BronxCare Health System in Bronx, New York. I graduated from the University at Buffalo School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences in 2025. Upon completion of my PGY-1 residency, I will remain at BronxCare Health System... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:30am - 9:50am EDT
Room 4

9:50am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 1

9:50am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 2

9:50am EDT

Barriers to iron deficiency screening for patients newly diagnosed with heart failure
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Authors:

Lacey Blauser, PharmD
Benjamin Heikkinen, PharmD, BCIDP
Devaney Taylor, PharmD
Keturah DelGrosso, PharmD, BCPS
Jennifer Heikkinen, PharmD, BCACP
Catherine Haupt, PharmD, BCACP

Learning Objective:


Identify potential barriers to iron deficiency screening for patients newly diagnosed with heart failure by cardiology providers.



Self-Assessment Question:


True or False: A patient newly diagnosed with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction should be screened for iron deficiency.


Background:


The purpose of this study is to identify current practices and barriers to iron deficiency screening completion for newly diagnosed heart failure patients by cardiology providers and Medication Therapy Disease Management (MTDM) pharmacists.


Methods:


This cross-sectional study was conducted via anonymous Microsoft Forms survey and dispersed via email to cardiology providers and MTDM anemia and cardiology pharmacists between February 24, 2026, and March 20, 2026. The survey consisted of various question types (select all that apply, multiple choice, etc.) aimed to assess current understanding of guideline recommendations, current practices by the individual, perceived barriers impacting screening rates, and potential benefit of various interventions targeted at increasing iron deficiency screening rates for heart failure patients systemwide. Data collected from the survey was utilized in an aggregate manner to minimize the risk of answers being identifiable and then analyzed using Excel functions.


Results:


The survey was sent to a total of 133 individuals with completion by 17 unique participants (13.5%). Among survey respondents, there were discrepancies with baseline knowledge of guideline recommendations. Potential misconceptions identified include additional criteria needed for screening, such as baseline anemia or left ventricular ejection fraction less than 40%. In practice, the most prevalent reason for not screening at initial visit was the completion of recent lab work; however, the definition of recent varied between providers. The largest perceived barrier to screening was unfamiliarity with guideline recommendations. Respondents identified provider education and creation of a lab order bundle as most impactful interventions.


Conclusions:

Survey results suggest unfamiliarity with guideline recommendations may be significantly impacting iron deficiency screening completion rates. Next steps include targeted interventions including provider education and lab order bundles for implementation within the health system.
Moderators
BS

Brandon Smith

Clinical Pharmacy Specialist - Medical ICU, Howard University Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Lacey Blauser

Lacey Blauser

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, Geisinger Clinics Central
I am a current PGY-1 pharmacy resident at Geisinger Clinic Central in Danville, PA. I graduated from Grinnell College in 2022 with my Bachelor's degree in biology and neuroscience, before completing my PharmD from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine School of Pharmacy in 2025... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Brandon Snyder

Brandon Snyder

Residency Program Director, Pharmacist IV, WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital
I received my Bachelor's degree in Biology from Temple University, followed by my PharmD at the Jefferson College of Pharmacy in Philadelphia. I completed PGY-1 residency training at Penn State Health St Joseph. I have completed board certification in pharmacotherapy and the SIDP... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 6

9:50am EDT

Impact of propranolol and amantadine dual therapy on neurological recovery in adult traumatic brain injury
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Authors: Rachel Rivers, PharmD; April Finnigan, PharmD, BCCCP; Stefan Leichtle, MD, FACS; Jenna Smith, PharmD, BCCCP

Presentation Objective: Audience members will be able to describe the proposed pathophysiologic mechanisms of beta-blocker and amantadine therapy for neurological recovery in traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients.   

Background: This study aims to bridge the evidence gap for dual propranolol and amantadine therapy in adult TBI patients, namely, to assess the impact of dual therapy on cognitive recovery.

Methods: This was a single-center retrospective cohort study of adult patients with moderate-severe TBI between January 1, 2020 and December 31, 2024. Study subjects were excluded if they received propranolol or amantadine for an indication outside of TBI or prior to admission. The study population was stratified to three subgroups: patients who received dual therapy, patients who received amantadine only, and a control group in which participants received neither therapy. The primary endpoint was defined as the change in total Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score from baseline to day seven of therapy or admission. Secondary endpoints included change in motor GCS, peak GCS at therapy discontinuation and hospital discharge, ICU and hospital length of stay, use of adjunctive agents for agitation, and days of therapy with a Richmond Agitation-Sedation scale score > +1. Continuous endpoints were analyzed using the Kruskal-Wallis test and categorical endpoints using Pearson’s chi-squared statistics.

Results: Of 200 patients screened, 120 were included in the study population. Statistical analysis revealed significant improvement in total and motor GCS scores from admission to day seven in all subgroups, and from day one of therapy to day seven among the amantadine and dual therapy subgroups. However, the median score changes were comparatively similar between arms. Subjects in the amantadine and dual therapy arms had a greater incidence of neurosurgical intervention and intracranial pressure monitor placement, longer hospital and ICU LOS, and lower baseline GCS, suggesting more critical injury. The control population was noted to have a significantly greater incidence of agitation, with more frequent adjunct agent use and RASS scores > +1.

Conclusion: While outcome analyses did not reveal significant improvement in neurological recovery in the treatment subgroups compared to the control population, the variability in baseline characteristics and illness severity as well as treatment timeline should be noted. The greater incidence of adjunctive agent use for agitation in the control arm may suggest an accessory role of propranolol and amantadine in TBI symptom management. Post-hoc analyses are needed to delineate key between-group differences.

Self-Assessment Question: Which of the following statements describe the role of beta-blocker therapy in traumatic brain injury? (select all that apply) 
A. Beta-blockers play a preventative role in paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity by helping to blunt sympathetic overtone.  
B. Beta-blockers regulate disrupted dopaminergic and glutaminergic pathways.  
C. Beta-blockers reduce cerebral metabolic demand.
D. Beta-blockers increase myocardial oxygen demand.
Moderators
avatar for Crystal Cleveland

Crystal Cleveland

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Alexandria Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Rachel Rivers

Rachel Rivers

PGY2 Critical Care Pharmacy Resident, Inova Fairfax Medical Campus
Rachel Rivers, PharmD, is a PGY-2 Critical Care Pharmacy Resident at Inova Fairfax Medical Campus in Falls Church, Virginia. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Virginia Commonwealth University in 2024 prior to completing her PGY-1 Acute Care Pharmacy Residency at Inova... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 8

9:50am EDT

Prescribing practices and safety of methadone for pain management in hospitalized burn patients
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Title: Prescribing practices and safety of methadone for pain management in hospitalized burn patients 
Authors: Reagan Schlierf, PharmD, Sadora Franklin, PharmD, Olivia Berger, PharmD, BCPS, BCPMP, Jessica Crow, PharmD, MPH, BCCCP, FCCM, Traci Grucz, PharmD, BCCCP, Julie Caffrey, DO, FACOS, FABA, Haley Fribance, PharmD, BCCCP, CNSC 
Objective: Audience members will be able to describe the prescribing practices of methadone for pain management in burn patients at an academic medical center. 
Self-Assessment Question: True or False: Methadone has been used for pain management in burn patients, but more data are needed to standardize regimens and determine efficacy.
Background: The purpose of this study is to identify and describe the initiation, titration, and safety of methadone in hospitalized burn patients. Methadone for this indication has garnered interest, due to its unique profile, but has not been standardized. 
Methods: This retrospective, single cohort, observational study identified adult patients who were initiated on methadone during their admission for a burn managed by the JHBMC burn service. Patients on methadone prior to admission or initiated on methadone for opioid use disorder during their hospitalization were excluded. Systematic abstraction of data was performed through manual chart review. Descriptive statistics were used to characterize methadone initiation and titration, describe the patient population in which methadone was initiated, and identify the prevalence of adverse effects related to methadone use, such as QTc prolongation, serotonin syndrome, or naloxone administration, for the duration of the treatment period.  
Results: The initiation and titration of methadone, patient population characteristics, and documentation of adverse events will be described, and results will be presented. 
Conclusion: It is anticipated that the results of this retrospective chart review will demonstrate current prescribing practices and specific medication related adverse events of methadone for pain in burn patients at an academic medical center. 

Moderators
avatar for Michelle Kohute

Michelle Kohute

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Jersey Shore University Medical Center
Michelle Kohute, PharmD, BCCCP, earned her Bachelor of Science degree from the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy at Rutgers University in 1996 and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Rhode Island in 1998. She completed an American Society of Health-System Pharmacists... Read More →
Presenters
avatar for Reagan Schlierf

Reagan Schlierf

Dr. Reagan Schlierf, PharmD, is a PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. She completed her Bachelor’s Degree in Biochemistry at SUNY Brockport and earned her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from The University of Texas at Austin College of Pharmacy. Upon... Read More →
avatar for Sadora Franklin

Sadora Franklin

My name is Sadora Franklin and I am a current PGY1 Pharmacy Resident at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. I completed my undergraduate and pharmacy degree at the University of Pittsburgh. I will be staying on at The Johns Hopkins Hospital to complete a PGY2 in Pain Management and Palliative... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Sara Skoritowski

Sara Skoritowski

Clinical pharmacy practitioner, Veterans Affairs
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 5

9:50am EDT

Real-world assessment of rapid blood culture identification technology on emergency department blood culture callback process
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Title: Real-world assessment of rapid blood culture identification technology on emergency department blood culture callback process 
Authors: Eleanor Carr, PharmD, Casey Boyer, PharmD, BCEMP, Sangeeta Sastry, MD, Jihye Kim, PharmD, BCPS, BCIDP 
Learning Objective: Describe the clinical impact of BioFire® FilmArray® Blood Culture Identification 2 (BCID2) implementation on readmission rate for patients with coagulase-negative Staphylococcus (CoNS) -positive blood cultures after discharge from the emergency department (ED).  
 
Self-Assessment Question: 
What outcome significantly changed after implementation of BCID2 for patients who returned to the ED with coagulase‑negative Staphylococcus–positive blood cultures? 
  1. Readmission rate 
  2. Hospital length of stay  
  3. Prolonged antibiotic administration
  4.  None
Background:  
The objective of the study is to compare the callback readmission rates in patients discharged from the ED with CoNS blood cultures prior to and after BCID2 implementation at our institution on March 13,2023. 
 
Methods: 
This is a single‑center, retrospective, pre-post quasi-experimental study of adult patients (≥18 years) with at least one positive blood culture for CoNS and discharged from the ED between January 1, 2022, and August 31, 2025. Patients with polymicrobial blood cultures were excluded. Outcomes included hospital readmission rates, empiric CoNS antibiotic initiation upon readmission, and antibiotic duration greater than 72 hours, with statistical analyses performed using JMP® software. 
  
Results:  
A total of 55 patients (pre-BCID2, n=31; post-BCID2, n=24) met inclusion criteria. Readmission rate after BCID2 implementation was not statistically different between the two groups (pre-BCID2: n=18/32 (58.1%) vs post-BCID2: n=12/24 (50%), p = 0.5945). Implementation of BCID2 was associated with a significant decrease in antibiotic initiation upon readmission (pre-BCID2: n=14/18, (77.8%) vs post-BCID2: n=4/12 (33.3%), p = 0.0243). Additionally, prolonged use of empiric antimicrobials was significantly higher in pre-BCID2 group compared to post-BCID2 group during further evaluation upon readmission (pre-BCID2: n=5/18 (27.8%) vs post-BCID2: n=0/12 (0%), p = 0.0455).  
  
Conclusion: 
The implementation of BCID2 did not significantly reduce readmission rates among patients with CoNS‑positive blood cultures at our institution. However, BCID2 was associated with a statistically significant reduction in rates of antibiotic initiation and prolonged duration of therapy. These findings highlight an opportunity to further characterize re-admitted patients and develop an institution‑specific protocol to optimize and standardize ED blood culture callback processes and resource utilization. 
 

Moderators Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 3

9:50am EDT

Resident Presentation - Michelle Fuksman
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Title:
Ertapenem versus cefepime or other carbapenems for the treatment of AmpC-producing organisms

Authors:
Michelle Fuksman, PharmD; Antoinette Acbo, PharmD, BCIDP; Mary McKiever, PharmD; Sarah Valiante, PharmD, BCIDP

Learning Objective:
Compare the efficacy of select beta-lactams for the treatment of infections due to AmpC-producing organisms.

Self-Assessment Question:
Which of the following antibiotics would NOT be appropriate to treat Enterobacter cloacae bloodstream infection?
  1. Cefepime
  2. Imipenem
  3. Piperacillin-tazobactam
  4. Ertapenem

Background/Objective:
Ertapenem lacks data for the treatment of AmpC-producing organisms, but it is often used in clinical practice. This study aimed to investigate ertapenem for the treatment of AmpC-producing organisms compared to cefepime and other carbapenems.

Methods:
This retrospective, single center study evaluated ertapenem versus cefepime, meropenem, or imipenem for the treatment of AmpC-producing organisms. This study included adult patients given one of the study drugs as definitive therapy for AmpC-producing organisms from May 26, 2021 to June 30, 2025. Patients were excluded if they were pregnant, treated with over 72 hours of appropriate treatment before definitive therapy, treated with less than 72 hours of definitive therapy, expired within 48 hours of definitive therapy initiation, or if the pathogen was in stool culture only or resistant to definitive treatment. The primary endpoint was 90-day mortality. The secondary endpoints included 30-day mortality, clinical failure, microbiologic failure in patients with a positive blood culture, 30- and 90-day recurrence, and length of stay.

Results:
Across 216 patients, 96 received ertapenem, 86 received cefepime, 11 received imipenem, and 23 received meropenem. Ertapenem compared with cefepime, imipenem, or meropenem was not associated with increased 90-day mortality (22% versus 34%, 45%, and 39%, respectively; p=0.11) or increased 30-day mortality (17% versus 22%, 27%, and 39%, respectively; p=0.12). Microbiologic failure occurred in 1 case in the ertapenem group (1.0%; p>0.99). 30- and 90-day recurrence was comparable between treatments and occurred infrequently. In the meropenem and ertapenem groups, clinical failure (78% and 54% respectively; p=0.21) and median length of hospitalization (30 days and 23 days respectively; p=0.46) were not significantly different.

Conclusion:
Among patients with infections due to AmpC-producing organism(s), this data demonstrated no significant differences in ertapenem’s efficacy compared to cefepime, meropenem, or imipenem-cilastatin.
Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters
avatar for Michelle Fuksman

Michelle Fuksman

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Jersey Shore University Medical Center
Michelle Fuksman is a current PGY1 pharmacy resident at HMH Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, NJ. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy at Rutgers University in 2025.
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 4

9:50am EDT

Bridging the Gap: Impact of Pharmacist‑Led Medication Reconciliation at Care Transitions on Thirty-Day Readmissions in Heart Failure and Peak Medicare Advantage Patients
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Authors: Jaden Wills, PharmD; Kevin Pritt, PharmD, BCPS
Learning Objective: Determine if a pharmacist-led medication reconciliation and discharge counseling pilot program affects thirty-day all-cause readmission rates in specific patient subsets admitted to a general medicine unit.
Self-Assessment Question: Does pharmacist-led medication reconciliation during transitions of care, compared to standard nurse-led medication reconciliation, reduce 30-day hospital readmission rates?
Background: Hospital readmissions are a significant driver of healthcare utilization. This study assessed the impact of a novel, pharmacist-led medication reconciliation and discharge counseling during care transitions on thirty-day hospital readmission rates.
Methods: This pre-post retrospective study evaluated the impact of pharmacist-led medication reconciliation and discharge counseling on adult patients with a heart failure (HF) diagnosis (new onset or acute exacerbation) or those insured through Peak Medicare Advantage at an acute care hospital. The pre-intervention group included patients who received standard nurse-led medication reconciliation prior to November 1st, 2025. The post-intervention group included patients admitted after November 1st, 2025, and discharged prior to February 8th, 2026. The primary outcome was thirty-day readmission rates. Secondary outcomes included the number and class of medication interventions, provider acceptance rate, and proportion of patients receiving both medication reconciliation and discharge counseling. Data was collected using a secure Microsoft Excel spreadsheet and analyzed using descriptive statistics.
Results: Thirty patients were included in both the pre- and post-implementation groups. Thirty-day readmissions in the heart failure cohort decreased from 23.3% to 18.5% after implementation of pharmacist-led medication reconciliation and discharge counseling. PEAK readmission data is currently being collected and analyzed. Pharmacist involvement increased discrepancies discovered per patient (3.8 vs. 2.7) and achieved a 100% resolution rate compared to 70% in the pre-intervention group. The most common discrepancy in both groups was “patient not taking”. Notably, unintentional omission (n=13) and incorrect dose (n=6) were identified only in the pharmacist group. Discharge counseling rates increased by 10% post-implementation.
Conclusion: A structured, pharmacist-led care transition program is a vital component to reducing thirty-day readmission rates while also identifying and resolving clinically relevant medication discrepancies, particularly omissions and dose errors. The review’s findings emphasize both the clinical value and potential cost avoidance associated with integrating pharmacists into care transition programs. Future research should target larger populations, additional patient groups, and a prospective approach.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Jaden Wills

Jaden Wills

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, United Hospital Center
Evaluators
avatar for Christopher Hartley

Christopher Hartley

Pediatric surgery, gastroenterology, and liver transplant; assistant professor department of surgery Johns Hopkins University, The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 9:50am - 10:10am EDT
Room 7

10:10am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 2

10:10am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 1

10:10am EDT

Impact of clozapine risk evaluation and mitigation strategy (REMS) removal on absolute neutrophil count (ANC) monitoring
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Title: Impact of clozapine risk evaluation and mitigation strategy (REMS) removal on absolute neutrophil count (ANC) monitoring

Authors: Rhonda Moton (PharmD), Seema Ledan (PharmD), Jessica Ho (PharmD, BCPS, BCPP), Kristen Fink (PharmD, BCPS, BCACP, CDCES)

Learning objective: Audience members will be able to analyze the impact of the removal of the clozapine REMS program on monitoring practices of pharmacists and psychiatrists at a managed care institution

Self-Assessment Question:
True/False: Currently, clozapine therapy requires regular monitoring of a patient’s absolute neutrophil count (ANC) to ensure safe continuation of treatment.

Background: Clozapine treats resistant schizophrenia but is underused due to risks like agranulocytosis. After REMS ended in 2025, this study evaluates how its removal affected ANC monitoring over a 6-month period before and after REMS discontinuation.

Methods: Patients treated with clozapine from August 25, 2023 to August 25, 2025 were identified for evaluation. ANC data will be reviewed and compared across the six months before and after REMS discontinuation to determine any meaningful shifts in monitoring practices. The primary outcome is the frequency of ANC monitoring completed per patient over a 12-month period. Secondary outcomes include number of clozapine prescriptions not dispensed due to missing ANC values, the incidence and severity of neutropenia events, and rates of hospital, emergency department (ED), or urgent care visits related to psychosis. Additional measures include the number of new clozapine starts before and after REMS removal, as well as demographics, comorbidities, and encounter types gathered for context. Statistical analysis will use chi-square testing for the primary objective and descriptive methods for secondary outcomes. The project was reviewed and approved by Kaiser Permanente’s Institutional Review Board.

Results: Sixty-three clozapine patients were evaluated-59 pre-REMS and 58 post-REMS. All patients completed required ANC monitoring in both six-month periods, resulting in no variability and preventing chi-square analysis; thus, indicating no p-value. No prescriptions were denied for missing labs. Hematologic events were rare: one patient had mild neutropenia and another showed persistent neutrophilia. Fifty-nine patients started clozapine before REMS removal and four after. Pre-REMS, three patients required acute psychiatric care, while one post-REMS patient had increased psychiatric-related healthcare use, including multiple service encounters, follow-up visits, and additional outpatient visits to address ongoing symptoms.

Conclusion: Clozapine REMS discontinuation did not reduce adherence to ANC monitoring, which remained 100% in both pre- and post-REMS groups. No prescriptions were denied for missing labs, and hematologic events were rare. Few new clozapine starts occurred after REMS removal, suggesting institutional practices continued to support consistent monitoring. Larger studies with extended follow-up are needed to better evaluate potential long-term effects of REMS discontinuation more clearly.

Moderators
BS

Brandon Smith

Clinical Pharmacy Specialist - Medical ICU, Howard University Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Rhonda Moton

Rhonda Moton

PGY-1 Managed Care Resident, Kaiser Permanente Mid-Atlantic States
My name is Rhonda Moton, PharmD, RPh, MS and I'm a current managed care pharmacy resident at Kaiser Permanente Mid-Atlantic States Region. I received my pharmacy education at Touro College of Pharmacy located in New York and previously was a science teacher to both middle and high... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Brandon Snyder

Brandon Snyder

Residency Program Director, Pharmacist IV, WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital
I received my Bachelor's degree in Biology from Temple University, followed by my PharmD at the Jefferson College of Pharmacy in Philadelphia. I completed PGY-1 residency training at Penn State Health St Joseph. I have completed board certification in pharmacotherapy and the SIDP... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 6

10:10am EDT

Magnesium boluses for post operative atrial fibrillation prevention
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Title: Magnesium boluses for post operative atrial fibrillation prevention 

Authors: Alyssa Mills PharmD, Bradley Troyer PharmD, BCCCP, Emma Kabalka, PharmD and Brian Burton, MS. 

Objective: Identify if the use of magnesium boluses in addition to standard of care prevents post-operative atrial fibrillation (POAF) after coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG).  

Self-assessment: In this study, why might the magnesium bolus group not have shown a significant reduction in POAF compared to standard of care?  
A. Magnesium caused more side effects 
B. Magnesium levels were not consistently maintained above 3mg/dl 
C. Standard of care also included magnesium therapy
D. Magnesium levels were not measured appropriately  

Background: POAF occurs in 20-50% of all cardiac surgeries. Magnesium may lower risk by prolonging the atrial refractory periods and reducing myocardial excitability. This study evaluates adding magnesium boluses to standard care to prevent POAF after CABG.  

Methods: Medical records of 290 postoperative CABG patients admitted to Charleston Area Medical Center Memorial Hospital between January 1st, 2021, and March 21st, 2025 were reviewed. The first cohort received standard of care atrial fibrillation prophylaxis with amiodarone and beta-blockers while the other received magnesium boluses in addition to standard of care to maintain magnesium levels above 3mg/dL. 

Results: When analyzing the difference between patients who received magnesium boluses vs standard of care, there was no significant difference in the rate of POAF occurrence between the two cohorts (47% vs 36%, P=0.0957). For secondary outcomes, there was no difference between hours of vasopressors, hospital length of stay, or stroke occurrence. When examining compliance with the magnesium replacement protocol in the bolus cohort, 90% of patients had a low magnesium day and only 31% of those patients received adequate replacement. 

Conclusions: It is unclear whether POAF rates reflect magnesium inefficacy or failure to maintain levels consistently above 3mg/dL in the bolus cohort. The number of replacements varied despite subtherapeutic levels. This could have been due to our institution's protocols not appropriately being followed. A lack of appropriate documentation in the standard of care group may have also been a significant confounder. Prospective studies are needed to evaluate optimal magnesium replacement and effectiveness.  

Moderators
avatar for Michelle Kohute

Michelle Kohute

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Jersey Shore University Medical Center
Michelle Kohute, PharmD, BCCCP, earned her Bachelor of Science degree from the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy at Rutgers University in 1996 and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Rhode Island in 1998. She completed an American Society of Health-System Pharmacists... Read More →
Presenters
AM

Alyssa Mills

PGY1 Resident, Charleston Area Medical Center
Hello, my name is Alyssa Mills. I am currently a PGY1 resident at Charleston Area Medical Center. I previously graduated from Marshall University School of Pharmacy in 2025 with my PharmD. I will be continuing my training next year at Charleston Area Medical Center with a PGY2 in... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Sara Skoritowski

Sara Skoritowski

Clinical pharmacy practitioner, Veterans Affairs
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 5

10:10am EDT

Comparing the effectiveness of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists and sodium glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors in a nationwide observational cohort study on the rates of cardiovascular outcomes
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Title: Comparing the effectiveness of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists and sodium glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors in a nationwide observational cohort study on the rates of cardiovascular outcomes.
Authors: Madison Jones, PharmD; Tanvi Patil, PharmD, BCPS, DPLA; John Minchak, PharmD, MBA, BCPS, BCGP; Alamdeep Kaur, PharmD, BCPS
Learning Objective: At the conclusion of my presentation, the participant will be able to explain the comparative effectiveness of glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists (GLP1-RA) versus sodium glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) on cardiovascular outcomes in a nationwide observational cohort study.
Background/Objective: The purpose of this study is to compare cardiovascular composite outcomes in patients newly initiation on GLP1-RA or SGLT2i.
Methods: This retrospective active comparator new-user cohort study included veteran patients who newly initiated on either GLP1-RA or SGLT2i. We collected electronic health record data from nationwide Veterans Health Administration (VHA) database from 1/1/2018 through 1/1/2024.   Data was collected and combined from individual electronic medical records to the VA Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW) where it was modeled and prepared for use by The VA Informatics and Computing Infrastructure (VINCI) and extracted for study using sequel query language. We included patients who were newly started on either an SGLT2i or GLP1-RA. Patients taking a combination of a GLP1-RA and an SGLT2i any time before, during, or after the study period were excluded.  Patients with type I diabetes, renal or liver transplants prior to or during the duration of the study were excluded. Patients were excluded if they did not have any encounters with VA healthcare system within the past 2 years of study index date or have history of prior use of any combination of GLP1RA or SGLT2i in the previous 1-year lookback period. Confounding was accounted via nearest-neighbor pairwise propensity score (PS) matching informed by expert-identified variables meeting the disjunctive cause criterion.
The primary outcome was a composite rate of 4-point major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE): ischemic stroke (IS), myocardial infarction (MI), coronary revascularization (CV) and hospitalization for heart failure (HHF). Secondary outcomes included comparing the rates of individual components of the primary outcomes, peripheral arterial disease (PAD) as well as chronic pulmonary disease (CPD) hospitalizations and emergency room visits and atrial fibrillation between the two groups.
Results: Matched cohorts included 51,919 patients in each of the GLP1RA and SGLT2i exposure groups. Greater than 86.8% were males with mean age of 62.5 years. The rate of four-point MACE was increased in the matched cohort when compared to the GLP1 cohort (incidence rate per 100 person-years (IR)= 22.5 vs 20.4; adjusted Hazard Ratio (aHR)= 0.88 [0.85-0.92]; p= <0.001[MJ1] ). The rate of 3-pt MACE was lower in the GLP1RA group compared to the SGLT2i. (IR= 19.6 vs 17.9; aHR= 0.91 [0.87-0.95]; p= <0.001).
The secondary outcomes rates were lower in the GLP1RA group compared to SGLT2i for :  MI (IR= 12.7 vs 11.5; aHR= 0.81[0.76-0.86]; p= <0.001), IS (IR= 16.2 vs 13.8; aHR= 0.84[0.8-0.89]; p=<0.0010), Any stroke (IR=27.4 vs 24.9; aHR=0.88[0.82-0.94]; p=<0.001), and coronary vascularization (IR= 2.06 vs 1.77; aHR=0.8[0.68-0.95]; p=0.01). The rates of HHF were not significantly different between the cohorts (IR= 6.5 vs 4.44; aHR=0.82[0.64-1.04]; p=<0.097). No statistically significant difference was noted in the rates of  PAD(IR=25.9 vs 22; aHR= 0.99[0.93-1.07]; p=0.953) and atrial fibrillation (IR=41.2 vs 37.8; aHR=1.03[0.98-1.08; p=0.259), however atrial fibrillation did occur less frequently in the GLP1-RA group when limiting timeline to 90 days after therapy initiation (IR=27.5 vs 23.9; aHR=0.9[0.86-0.94]; p=<0.001) while the rates were similar at 180 days. The rates of CPD hospitalization (IR: 1.76 vs 1.42 SGLT2i ; aHR= 0.68[0.56-0.81]; p= <0.001) and emergency room visits (IR: 7.74 vs 6.21 SGLT2i; aHR= 0.85[0.78-0.92]; p=<0.001) were significantly lower in the GLP1RA group compared to SGLT2i.
Conclusions(s): Overall, the rate of 4-point MACE and 3-point MACE was significantly lower in GLP1RA group compared to SGLT2i, however, the rates of HHF were similar with numerically higher incidence rates in GLP1RA as compared to SGLT2i. No difference in the rates of Atrial fibrillation was found however the risk was lower at 90 days in the GLP1RA group however no significant difference in rates were noted between the cohorts at 180 days, indicating time varying confounders and warrants further research. Our study also showed that the rates of ER and Hospitalization for CPD were significantly lower in the GLP1RA group compared to SGLT2i in agreement. Future prospective studies should focus on ascertaining the difference between COPD and ASTHMA rates individually, differences in the rates of Atrial fibrillation with long term GLP1RA utilization as well as differences based on previous history of diabetes.
Self Assessment Question: MACE (MI, ischemic stroke, HF, CV) occurred more frequently in patients receiving an SGLT2i than patients using GLP1-RAs. (True/False)
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Madison Jones

Madison Jones

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Salem VA Healthcare System
Dr. Madison Jones is a PGY1 pharmacy resident at the Salem VA Healthcare Center. She is originally from Floyd, Virginia and attended pharmacy school at ETSU Gatton College of Pharmacy. After completion of her PGY1, Dr. Jones plans on becoming a clinical pharmacist in Roanoke, Vir... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 3

10:10am EDT

Advancing antimicrobial stewardship by streamlining pharmacist management of culture results through implementation of a collaborative practice agreement in a community hospital emergency department: post implementation assessment
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Title 
Advancing antimicrobial stewardship by streamlining pharmacist management of culture results through implementation of a collaborative practice agreement in a community hospital emergency department: post implementation assessment  

Authors 
Dasia Simmons, PharmD 
Benjamin Miles, PharmD, BCPS, BCEMP  
Mandana Eimen, PharmD  
Christopher Keeys, PharmD, BCPS 
Paul Norris, PharmD 

Background/Objective 
To evaluate post-implementation outcomes of a pharmacist-driven antimicrobial stewardship model for post-discharge culture review in the emergency department, where patients are often discharged prior to availability of final microbiology results. At Sibley Memorial Hospital, a collaborative practice agreement supports pharmacist-led review, with prior data demonstrating predominantly no-change interventions alongside a subset of clinically actionable modifications, including correction of drug–bug mismatches and initiation of therapy for previously untreated infections. 

Methods 
A post-implementation assessment will be conducted to further define the scope and nature of pharmacist interventions, characterize their clinical significance, and identify opportunities for improvement. The analysis will evaluate patterns of drug–bug mismatches, assess cases requiring no change to determine appropriateness of therapy versus contamination or colonization, and examine cases requiring new antibiotic initiation to identify factors contributing to lack of initial treatment, including ED readmissions. Additionally, infection-specific trends associated with antibiotic changes will be analyzed, and any variations from the collaborative practice agreement will be documented. 

Conclusion 
This post implementation assessment  is expected to further  characterize the clinical relevance of pharmacist-led interventions,  identify opportunities to optimize antimicrobial stewardship efforts,  improve post-discharge outcomes in the ED setting, and meet regulatory compliance ensuring pharmacist interventions are consistently aligned with the approved collaborative practice agreement in the District of Columbia.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for dasia simmons

dasia simmons

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Sibley Memorial Hospital
I am a native of Washington, DC. I earned my Bachelor of Science in Family Science from the University of Maryland, College Park, and went on to receive my Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Howard University. While in pharmacy school, I conducted HIV research focused on addressing gaps... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Christopher Hartley

Christopher Hartley

Pediatric surgery, gastroenterology, and liver transplant; assistant professor department of surgery Johns Hopkins University, The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 7

10:10am EDT

Evaluating the impact of an antibiotic guideline for open fractures on antibiotic stewardship
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Authors: Jimin Jun, PharmD; April Finnigan, PharmD, BCCCP; Natalie Atkin, DO; Stefan Leichtle, MD, MBA; Lois Lee, PharmD, BCPPS, BCIDP
Learning Objective: Audience members will be able to describe how implementation of a health system-developed guideline promotes consistent, evidence-based prophylactic antibiotic selection and duration for open fracture injuries. 
Background/Objective: Recent literature reports variability in prophylactic antibiotic practices for open fractures despite guidelines and stewardship efforts. This study describes how an institutional guideline supports antimicrobial stewardship and patient outcomes.
Methods: This retrospective analysis included patients treated at a single tertiary care hospital from January 2022 through May 2025. Of 500 participants who received prophylactic antibiotics for open long bone fractures, 186 were analyzed; those discharged within 72 hours or undergoing extremity amputation were excluded. The study evaluated antibiotic patterns before and after the implementation of the system guideline in May 2024. The primary outcome was days of therapy for prophylactic antibiotics. The secondary outcomes included time to targeted therapy, protocol adherence in the post-implementation group, and trauma site infection incidence. The primary outcome was reported as a median with interquartile ranges and analyzed using Mann Whitney U, with statistical significance defined as a p-value less than 0.05. Secondary outcomes were reported as descriptive statistics with statistics completed using a chi-square test. 
Results: The primary endpoint, median duration of therapy, was significantly shorter after the implementation of a standardized institution guideline, decreasing from 2 days pre-guideline to 1 day post-guideline. Median time to targeted therapy was similar between groups (12 minutes pre-guideline vs. 11 minutes post-guideline). Regarding safety outcomes, surgical site infections occurred in 9.7% of pre-guideline patients and 11.8% of post-guideline patients. Overall guideline adherence in the post-guideline group was 77.4%.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates the antimicrobial stewardship impact of implementing a hospital guideline to standardize antibiotic prophylaxis for open fracture injuries. A concurrent reduction in broad-spectrum antibiotic utilization, particularly piperacillin–tazobactam, further supports its stewardship benefit. Findings highlight the need for improved standardization and monitoring strategies for type III injuries, where guideline noncompliance was most frequent.
Self-Assessment Question: What practice gap can an institution-derived guideline for antibiotic prophylaxis in open fracture injuries primarily address? 
Self-Assessment Answer: a) Variability in timing of surgical intervention, b) Inconsistency in antibiotic duration and selection, c) Under-recognition of surgical site infections, d) Limited access to broad-spectrum antibiotics
Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 4

10:10am EDT

Evaluation of gabapentinoid therapy and impact on chronic non-cancer pain for patients on concomitant chronic opioid therapy
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
TITLE: Evaluation of gabapentinoid therapy and impact on chronic non-cancer pain for patients on concomitant chronic opioid therapy

AUTHORS:
Destiny Walker, PharmD
Laurence Martinez, PharmD, BCACP
Julia Kaminski, PharmD

LEARNING OBJECTIVE: Audience members will be able to evaluate the risk versus benefit of concomitant gabapentinoids and chronic opioid therapy to mitigate opioid dose escalation.

OBJECTIVE: The primary objective is to assess the impact on morphine milligram equivalents (MME) and safety outcomes for Veterans utilizing gabapentinoid therapy in combination with chronic opioid therapy compared to patients on opioid monotherapy.

METHODS: The Coatesville Veterans Affairs Medical Center (CVAMC) operates a multidisciplinary outpatient pain clinic managing high risk patients on chronic opioid therapy with complex comorbidities. This retrospective, single-center study reviewed Veterans who received chronic opioid therapy and were enrolled in the pain clinic between November 4th, 2022, and August 25th, 2025. The study aimed to evaluate the impact on MME and safety outcomes for Veterans prescribed opioids and gabapentinoids, and those prescribed opioid monotherapy by a CVAMC pain provider. Exclusion criteria encompassed patients initially prescribed tramadol, codeine with acetaminophen, buprenorphine, or gabapentinoids prior to opioids. Patients had to be prescribed therapy from CVAMC pain provider. If prescribed opioids for acute conditions and cancer pain the patients were excluded. A subgroup analysis was completed to further examine any outliers within the study groups, including rapid tapers and changes in therapy.

RESULTS: There were 117 Veterans’ charts reviewed, 63 patients were excluded primarily due to the initiation of gabapentinoid therapy prior to opioid therapy. A total of 24 patients were included in the gabapentinoid with concomitant opioid therapy group, while 30 patients were included in the opioid monotherapy group. The average change in MME was -4.36 in the gabapentinoid with opioid group and -19.66 in the opioid monotherapy group. The gabapentinoid with opioid group reported limited side effects, with somnolence being the most common effect with 8.3%. All participants were prescribed naloxone and received opioid overdose prevention education. No opioid overdoses were reported during the study period.

CONCLUSION: Adjuvant gabapentinoid therapy with chronic opioid therapy can be considered to further reduce pain with minimal side effects if all non-opioid treatments have been exhausted and risk mitigation strategies are utilized. Despite a greater reduction in mean MME in the opioid monotherapy group, the gabapentinoid with opioid therapy also saw MME reductions, possibly influenced by patient specific factors like etiology of pain, non-opioid therapies, and patient hesitancy with opioid dose reduction.

SELF-ASSESSMENT QUESTION:  Can gabapentinoids be an effective adjuvant therapy for patients on long-term opioid therapy to mitigate opioid dose escalation without increasing risks?
Moderators
avatar for Crystal Cleveland

Crystal Cleveland

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Alexandria Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Destiny Walker

Destiny Walker

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Coatesville VA Medical Center
Hello! My name is Destiny Walker, and I am currently a PGY1 pharmacy resident at the Coatesville VA Medical Center. I earned my Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Maryland Eastern Shore School of Pharmacy and Health Professions. After completing my residency, I aspire... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 10:10am - 10:30am EDT
Room 8

10:30am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 1

10:30am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 2

10:30am EDT

Comparing the incidence of gout in patients taking losartan versus thiazide or thiazide-like diuretics: a real-world retrospective study
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Authors: Gi Eun (Jemma) Han, PharmD; Anthony M. Ishak, PharmD

Objective: Audience members will be able to assess the clinical relationship between losartan vs thiazide or thiazide-like diuretic use and gout/hyperuricemia incidence in patients who have hypertension.

Self-Assessment Question: How would the results of this study affect your decision with antihypertensive agent selection in patients with or at-risk for gout?

Background: Current gout guidelines preferentially recommend losartan for hypertension in individuals with gout for its suggested uricosuric effects. There are no real-world studies that directly compare losartan to thiazides and/or thiazide-like diuretics regarding their correlation to gout or hyperuricemia.

Methods: A total of 5,388 patients prescribed losartan or thiazide/thiazide-like diuretics (chlorthalidone, hydrochlorothiazide, indapamide, and metolazone) between July 1, 2023 and June 30, 2024 were identified from 11 primary care clinics in the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) system. The index event was defined as outpatient visits (including urgent care and emergency department) or hospitalization with a gout/hyperuricemia ICD-10 code as the primary or first diagnosis during the 1-year period. New outpatient prescriptions of colchicine, indomethacin, corticosteroids (i.e. prednisone, prednisolone, methylprednisolone, and triamcinolone acetonide injection), and uricosuric agents (i.e. allopurinol, febuxostat, probenecid) were also identified during the study period. Serum uric acid levels within 1 year prior to the index event were collected.

Results: Of the 2,591 patients taking losartan, 72 (2.8%) had visits related to gout/hyperuricemia. Of the 2,797 patients taking thiazides or thiazide-like diuretics, 77 (2.8%) had visits. There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups regarding the index event (p=0.954). Patients in the thiazide or thiazide-like diuretics group had a higher number of new prescriptions per patient than those in the losartan group for each type of medication. The mean serum uric acid level was lower in the losartan group compared to the thiazides and thiazide-related diuretics group (6.1 mg/dL [± 2.3 mg/dL] vs. 6.9 mg/dL [± 1.8 mg/dL]).

Conclusion: There was no statistically significant difference in gout/hyperuricemia occurrence for patients with hypertension taking losartan compared to those taking thiazides or thiazide-like diuretics during a 1-year study period.
Moderators
BS

Brandon Smith

Clinical Pharmacy Specialist - Medical ICU, Howard University Hospital
Presenters
avatar for Gi Eun (Jemma) Han

Gi Eun (Jemma) Han

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Massachusetts General Hospital
Jemma received her PharmD degree from MCPHS University - Boston and is currently a PGY1 pharmacy resident at Massachusetts General Hospital. Her interest is in emergency medicine, and she will be starting her PGY2 Emergency Medicine Residency with Stanford Health Care.
Evaluators
avatar for Brandon Snyder

Brandon Snyder

Residency Program Director, Pharmacist IV, WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital
I received my Bachelor's degree in Biology from Temple University, followed by my PharmD at the Jefferson College of Pharmacy in Philadelphia. I completed PGY-1 residency training at Penn State Health St Joseph. I have completed board certification in pharmacotherapy and the SIDP... Read More →
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 6

10:30am EDT

Efficacy and safety of lower dose compared to standard dose intrapleural alteplase combined with dornase for complicated pleural effusion
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Title
Efficacy and safety of lower dose compared to standard dose intrapleural alteplase combined with dornase for complicated pleural effusion

Authors
Sarah Thompson, PharmD, MS Siu Yan Yeung, PharmD, BCCCP Mehrnaz Pajoumand, PharmD, BCCCP

Learning Objective
At the conclusion of this presentation, participants will be able to describe the efficacy and safety of lower dose compared to standard dose intrapleural alteplase combined with dornase for complicated pleural effusion.

Background/Objective
The optimal dose of intrapleural (IP) alteplase combined with dornase for complicated pleural effusion remains unclear. This study evaluates whether a lower dose regimen provides efficacy and safety comparable to the standard dose.

Methods
This multicenter retrospective cohort study included adult patients receiving IP alteplase plus dornase for complicated pleural effusion or empyema at eight hospitals within an academic health system. Patients were categorized by IP alteplase dose received: lower dose (<10 mg) or standard dose (10 mg), with consistent dornase dosing. The primary outcome was treatment success, defined as survival without need for surgical intervention within ninety days of IP fibrinolytic therapy. Secondary outcomes included bleeding events, hospital length of stay, mortality, and need for dose escalation.

Results
Among 364 patients, treatment success is similar between groups: 82.2% of the lower-dose group (n=90) and 79.9% of the standard-dose group (n=274), with risk ratio of 1.03 (95% CI 0.91 - 1.16, p = 0.62). The results are similar with adjusted analyses (adjusted RR 1.01, 95% CI 0.89–1.14). Rates of surgery (11.1% vs 11.3%) and in-hospital mortality (6.7% vs 9.1%) were similar. The lower-dose group had higher rates of additional chest tube placement (29.2% vs 19.3%) and a longer hospital length of stay (median 18.8 vs 11.9 days). The lower-dose group had dose escalation in 16.7% of patients. Analysis of bleeding events is ongoing.

Conclusions
Lower-dose intrapleural alteplase was non-inferior to standard dosing for treatment success, with comparable surgery and mortality outcomes.

Self-Assessment Question
Which outcome defines treatment success in this study of IP alteplase dosing?
A. Radiographic improvement only
B. Survival without surgical intervention within ninety days
C. Decrease in chest tube duration
D. Reduction in hospital length of stay
Moderators
avatar for Michelle Kohute

Michelle Kohute

PGY1 Residency Program Director, Jersey Shore University Medical Center
Michelle Kohute, PharmD, BCCCP, earned her Bachelor of Science degree from the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy at Rutgers University in 1996 and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Rhode Island in 1998. She completed an American Society of Health-System Pharmacists... Read More →
Presenters
avatar for Sarah Thompson

Sarah Thompson

Sarah Jean Thompson, PharmD, MS is a PGY1 non-traditional pharmacy resident at University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, MD.  She completed her Doctor of Pharmacy from Wingate University followed by a Master's in Medical Cannabis Science and Therapeutics from University... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Sara Skoritowski

Sara Skoritowski

Clinical pharmacy practitioner, Veterans Affairs
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 5

10:30am EDT

Enoxaparin for trauma-related venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis: bleeding risk with vs. without monitoring in a rural academic medical center
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Title: Enoxaparin for trauma-related venous thromboembolism prophylaxis: Bleeding risk with vs. without monitoring in a rural academic medical center 
Authors: Lauren Wagner, PharmD, MBA; Alena Thannikal, PharmD, BCPS, BCCCP; Michelle Budzyn, PharmD, BCPS 
Learning Objective: Evaluate trauma-related bleeding complications with or without a pharmacist-driven monitoring protocol 
Self-assessment question: True or False: In trauma patients receiving anti-Xa monitoring, the rate of clinically significant bleeding is decreased
Background/objective: Pharmacist‑driven monitoring and dose adjustment may optimize enoxaparin prophylaxis, but rates of bleeding in rural trauma patients receiving enoxaparin for VTE prophylaxis remains understudied.  This study evaluates bleeding outcomes with or without pharmacist‑driven monitoring. 
Methods: This single‑center retrospective cohort study examined adult trauma patients who received enoxaparin for trauma‑related VTE prophylaxis from 9/1/24–1/1/25, compared those with pharmacist‑driven monitoring to those without it. Included criteria were trauma patients ≥18 years who received enoxaparin during hospitalization at a Geisinger Medical Center facility. Patients were excluded if they were on hemodialysis, pregnant, had known enoxaparin hypersensitivity, or anticoagulated immediately before prophylaxis. The primary outcome was the rate of clinically significant bleeding in monitored versus non‑monitored patients and assess factors influencing complications, including traumatic brain injury (TBI), spinal cord injury, pelvic fractures, advanced age, and low body weight. Secondary outcomes include incidence of any thrombotic event. The primary outcome was analyzed using a chi-square test with associated factors evaluated through a multivariable logistic regression model in a forest plot. The secondary outcome was analyzed using Fisher’s exact test. Statistical significance was defined as α = 0.05 for all analyses. 
Results: Out of 673 patients, 324 were included in the analysis, 203 in the monitored group, and 121 in the non-monitored group. Incidence of significant bleeding occurred in 17.7% in the monitored group and 11.6% in the non-monitored group (RR 1.53, p = 0.137). Two variables, advanced age (OR 6.56, p = 0.114) and monitored/non-monitored (OR 7.93, p = 0.083), were identified to have an increased odd of bleeding. Incidence of new thrombotic events occurred in 0.5% in the monitored group and 2.5% in the non-monitored group (RR 0.20, p = 0.149).
Conclusion: The results of this study showed no statistical significance in bleeding events nor new thrombotic events between the two groups. Therefore, Anti-Xa level monitoring may be beneficial in high-risk patient populations such as advanced age, traumatic brain injury (TBI), or pelvic fractures. However, larger, more refined studies will be required to confirm these findings.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Lauren  Wagner

Lauren Wagner

PGY1 Acute Care Pharmacy Resident, Geisinger Medical Center
I am a PharmD/MBA graduate from Wilkes University Nesbitt School of Pharmacy (Class of 2025). I am currently a PGY-1 acute care pharmacy resident at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, PA. My current areas of interest include emergency medicine, internal medicine, and transplant... Read More →
Evaluators

Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 3

10:30am EDT

Outcomes associated with anticoagulation in cardiothoracic surgery patients with post-operative thrombocytopenia
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Title: Outcomes associated with anticoagulation in cardiothoracic surgery patients with post-operative thrombocytopenia
Authors: Nada Daoud, PharmD; Corinne Whiteman, PharmD, BCCCP; Karishma Patel, PharmD
Objective: Audience members will be able to describe the incidence of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) in cardiothoracic (CT) surgery patients.
Self-assessment question: True or False? Patients who develop thrombocytopenia while on heparin should be switched to a non-heparin anticoagulant regardless of their 4T score.
Background: When HIT is suspected, a 4T score is calculated and heparin is switched to a non-heparin anticoagulant. This study aimed to assess the incidence of HIT in post-operative CT surgery patients and evaluate the safety of argatroban.
Methods: This is a retrospective, single-center cohort study with data collected from January 2020 to July 2025. Post-operative CT surgery patients were eligible for inclusion if they had a platelet factor 4 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (PF4 ELISA) and/or serotonin release assay (SRA) HIT panel ordered within 30 days after surgery. Patients were excluded if they did not receive anticoagulation, had a prior history of HIT, were less than 18 years of age, or were pregnant. The primary outcome was the incidence of SRA-confirmed HIT. Secondary outcomes included intensive care unit (ICU) and hospital length of stays, 90-day mortality, time to therapeutic activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), and incidence of thrombocytopenia. Safety outcomes were the incidence of hepatotoxicity, bleeding, and thrombosis. Categorical data was reported as percentages, and continuous data was expressed as medians with interquartile ranges.
Results: A total of 54 patients were reviewed for eligibility, and 28 patients were included. Twenty-four hours after a HIT panel was ordered, 11 patients were not on anticoagulation, 11 were on heparin, and 6 were on argatroban. One patient met the primary outcome of having SRA-positive HIT (3.6%). Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was the most common type of CT surgery in all three groups. Patients in the heparin group had longer hospital length of stays (23.7 [28.6] days) compared to those in the argatroban (17.3 [24.5] days) and no anticoagulation groups (19.5 [17.1] days). Patients on argatroban experienced more hepatotoxicity (83% vs. 75% vs. 67%) and bleeding events (100% vs. 63% vs. 83%) than those on heparin and no anticoagulation.
Conclusions: The low incidence of SRA-confirmed HIT suggests that post-CT surgery patients may develop thrombocytopenia due to risk factors other than heparin use. Switching from heparin to a non-heparin anticoagulant may be inappropriate in patients with a low 4T score and result in adverse events, as patients on argatroban experienced more hepatotoxicity and bleeding. Larger studies are needed to further define the incidence of HIT in CT surgery patients and the impact of argatroban on patient outcomes.
Moderators Presenters Evaluators
avatar for Christopher Hartley

Christopher Hartley

Pediatric surgery, gastroenterology, and liver transplant; assistant professor department of surgery Johns Hopkins University, The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 7

10:30am EDT

Impact of blood culture identification panel on time to appropriate antimicrobial therapy in adult patients
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Authors: 
Kayleigh Early, PharmD; Brittany Thomas, PharmD, BCIDP; Alison Sabados, PharmD, BCCCP 
 
Learning Objective: 
Describe the impact of rapid molecular blood culture diagnostics on antimicrobial optimization and stewardship interventions in adult patients with bloodstream infections.
 
Background: 
Bloodstream infections are associated with increased morbidity and mortality, and delays in therapy worsen outcomes. Blood culture identification (BCID) panel implementation, with antimicrobial stewardship, may shorten time to therapy optimization.
 
Methods: 
This retrospective, pre–post cohort study evaluated adult patients aged 18 years or older admitted to WellSpan York Hospital with at least one positive blood culture in September 2023 (pre-BCID implementation) or September 2025 (post-BCID implementation). The primary outcome was time to appropriate antimicrobial therapy. Secondary outcomes included time to first antimicrobial change, time to antimicrobial escalation or de-escalation, days of therapy, and the number, type, and timing of pharmacist-driven antimicrobial interventions, as well as hospital length of stay and in-hospital mortality.

Results: 
A total of 109 patients were included (52 pre-BCID implementation, 57 post-BCID implementation) with similar baseline characteristics between groups. There was no difference in time to appropriate antimicrobial therapy (0 vs. 0 hours, p=0.746). Time to first antimicrobial change was significantly reduced (36.2 vs. 12.1 hours, p=0.007), with faster de-escalation (43.7 vs. 18.6 hours, p=0.016) but no difference in time to escalation (27.4 vs. 4.4 hours, p=0.342). Pharmacist interventions increased, with shorter time to intervention (39.2 vs. 13.6 hours, p=0.045). No differences were observed in days of therapy, hospital length of stay, or in-hospital mortality.

Conclusion: 
Implementation of a BCID panel improved the timeliness of antimicrobial optimization, including faster de-escalation and pharmacist-driven interventions. Despite these improvements, no differences were observed in time to appropriate antimicrobial therapy, time to escalation, or clinical outcomes. These findings suggest empiric regimens, guided by local antibiograms and institutional protocols, were generally appropriate, with BCID further enhancing timely antimicrobial optimization.  

Self-Assessment Question:
A hospitalized adult is started empirically on vancomycin and cefepime for suspected bacteremia. Rapid BCID panel results return. 
In which scenario should rapid identification prompt an urgent change in antimicrobial therapy? 
A. MSSA identified; patient receiving vancomycin and cefepime 
B. E. coli identified; patient receiving vancomycin and cefepime 
C. MRSA identified; patient receiving vancomycin and cefepime  
D. Candida glabrata identified; patient receiving vancomycin and cefepime



Moderators
avatar for Crystal Cleveland

Crystal Cleveland

Clinical Pharmacist, Inova Alexandria Hospital
Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 8

10:30am EDT

Impact of documented beta-lactam allergy on surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis selection in cesarean delivery
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Title: Impact of documented beta-lactam allergy on surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis selection in cesarean delivery

Authors: Catherine Herman, PharmD; Corey Medler, PharmD, MPH, BCIDP; Lindsay Donohue, PharmD, BCIDP 

Learning Objective: At the conclusion of my presentation, audience members will be able to describe how β-lactam allergy documentation can influence surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis (SAP) choice and timing in cesarean deliveries. 

Background/Objective: Although cefazolin’s unique R-1 side chain makes cross-reactivity with other β-lactams rare, this study evaluates whether documented β-lactam allergy affects SAP choice and timing in cesarean deliveries. 

Methods: This single-center, retrospective, cross-sectional study included adult patients (≥ 18 years) who underwent cesarean delivery at a large academic medical center in central Virginia from June 1, 2024 to May 31, 2025. Patients receiving antibiotics for treatment of active infection were excluded. The primary endpoint was the percentage of patients with a documented β-lactam allergy who received inappropriate SAP, encompassing both agent selection and timing. Secondary endpoints included inappropriate SAP amongst all cesarean delivery patients, incidence of suspected surgical site infection (SSI), postoperative acute kidney injury (AKI), and Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). Data were collected through manual electronic medical record review and analyzed using descriptive statistics, chi-square, and Fisher’s exact tests. 

Results: Of 208 patients included, 104 had a documented β-lactam allergy and 104 did not. Most documented allergens were penicillins (>80%); 2 patients reported a cefazolin allergy. IgE-mediated reactions were most common (46%), followed by mild reactions (41%). Inappropriate SAP occurred in 22.1% of patients with a documented β-lactam allergy vs. 11.5% in non-β-lactam allergy patients (OR 2.18, p = 0.041). This was driven by higher rates of inappropriate agent selection (14.4% vs. 1.9%; OR 8.60, p = 0.001) and timing (21.2% vs. 10.6%; OR 2.27, p = 0.037) in β-lactam allergy patients. Suspected SSI occurred in 6.7% of patients, with no significant difference by allergy status or agent appropriateness. No postoperative AKI or CDI were identified. 

Conclusions: Documented β-lactam allergy was associated with a higher rate of inappropriate SAP selection and timing, driven largely by unnecessary avoidance of cefazolin. These findings highlight opportunities for β-lactam allergy evaluation and de-labeling, optimization of perioperative order sets, and integration of decision-support tools to improve antimicrobial stewardship in cesarean deliveries. 

Self-Assessment Question: True/False: A documented β-lactam allergy was associated with significantly higher odds of inappropriate SAP, even though most patients could have safely received cefazolin.
Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters
avatar for Catherine Herman

Catherine Herman

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, University of Virginia Health
Catherine Herman, PharmD, is a PGY1 pharmacy resident at the University of Virginia (UVA) Health Medical Center. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy and completed her undergraduate studies at UNC Chapel Hill. Following completion of her PGY1... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 10:30am - 10:50am EDT
Room 4

11:00am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 2

11:00am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 1

11:00am EDT

Impact of pharmacist-managed weight management service on weight loss and associated clinical outcomes
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Impact of pharmacist-managed weight management service on weight loss and associated clinical outcomes

Authors: Rita Chen, PharmD; Kelly Goldberg, PharmD, BCACP; Emmanuel Kim, PharmD; Jessie Morgan, PharmD, MSHA, BCPS; Kristen Fink, PharmD, BCPS, BCACP, CDCES 

Background/Objective: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of a pharmacist-managed weight management service (WMS) on weight loss and related clinical outcomes in patients newly initiated on GLP-1 receptor agonist (RA) or GIP/GLP-1 RA therapy. 

Methods:
This retrospective cohort study evaluated adults enrolled in a pharmacy WMS within Kaiser Permanente Mid-Atlantic States between June 1, 2024 to May 31, 2025. Eligible patients were ≥18 years of age and newly initiated on a GLP-1 RA or GIP/GLP-1 RA through WMS. Patients <18 years of age, pregnant or breastfeeding, using compounded GLP-1 RA or GIP/GLP-1 RA, previously initiated on GLP-1 RA or GIP/GLP-1 RA therapy prior to enrollment, or paying cash for therapy were excluded. Of 6,968 enrolled patients, 127 WMS patients and 127 usual care patients were randomly selected.  Primary outcomes were percent change in body weight from baseline to program completion and percent change in body mass index (BMI). Secondary outcomes included changes in blood pressure, HbA1c, and lipids; pharmacist intervention; medication adherence (proportion of days covered); enrollment duration; and adverse events. Baseline characteristics were summarized descriptively, and independent t-tests compared outcomes (α=0.05). 

Results:  
Mean weight change was 8.07% with pharmacist-managed care versus 4.23% in usual care (p<0.001), with BMI reduction of 2.80 vs 0.27 kg/m² (p=0.045). A higher proportion of control group patients achieved ≥5% weight loss (36.2% vs 33.9%), likely due to tirzepatide use versus semaglutide in WMS. WMS patients experienced greater cardiometabolic improvements, with 88% showing blood pressure reductions compared with 71.2% in controls, and 75% of diabetic patients demonstrating HbA1c improvement versus 53.8%. Pharmacist interventions included dose titration, adverse effect management, and lifestyle counseling. Adverse events were primarily gastrointestinal. PDC not calculated due to monthly GLP-1 RA or GIP/GLP-1 RA titration and insufficient refill history. 

Conclusion:
Pharmacist-managed weight management services were associated with greater weight reduction and favorable cardiometabolic outcomes among adults initiating GLP-1 RA or GIP/GLP-1 RA therapy compared with usual care. These findings highlight the value of pharmacist-led weight management programs in supporting medication optimization, adherence, and multidisciplinary obesity care. 

Learning Objective:
Describe the impact of a pharmacist-managed weight management service on weight loss and associated clinical outcomes in adults newly initiated on GLP-1 RA or GIP/GLP-1 RA therapy. 

Self-Assessment Question:  
True or False: Pharmacists can support patients taking GLP-1 RA or GIP/GLP-1 RA medications by managing dosing, monitoring for adverse effects, and providing lifestyle counseling. 

Moderators Presenters
avatar for Rita Chen

Rita Chen

PGY-2 Ambulatory Care Resident, Kaiser Permanente
Evaluators
avatar for Vi Nguyen

Vi Nguyen

Clinical Pharmacist II, IMVH hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 6

11:00am EDT

Bridging the gap: Impact of discharge medication provision on psychiatric readmission rates
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Title: Bridging the gap: Impact of discharge medication provision on psychiatric readmission rates 
  
Authors: Alexis Roman, PharmD; Madeline Corrao, PharmD; Sabra Douthit, PharmD 
 
Objective:
Evaluate the impact of discharge medication delivery through a Meds to Beds (M2B) program, compared with patient pickup at a community pharmacy, on 30-day psychiatric hospital readmission rates. 

Self-Assessment Question: Which factor is most strongly associated with psychiatric hospital readmissions during transitions of care?
A. Short inpatient length of stay
B. Dose adjustments during hospitalization 
C. Medication nonadherence after discharge
D. Overuse of long-acting injectable therapies
  
Background: Psychiatric inpatients who receive discharge medications prior to leaving the facility experience significantly lower 30-day readmission rates than those discharged with prescriptions filled at an outside community pharmacy.  
 
Methods: This retrospective cohort study will use electronic medical record (EPIC) data to compare adult psychiatric inpatients discharged with medications through a Meds to Beds (M2B) program versus prescriptions filled at community pharmacies. Eligible patients will be ≥18 years old, admitted to Geisinger Behavioral Health Northeast, discharged on at least one medication, and have a primary psychiatric diagnosis; patients discharged to a state hospital or who expired within 30 days post‑discharge will be excluded. Data from August 1, 2023, to July 31, 2025, will be analyzed (estimated n=200), with 30‑day psychiatric readmission as the primary outcome with 7‑ and 14‑day readmissions as secondary outcomes; descriptive statistics and comparative analyses (Fisher’s exact tests) will be performed. 
 
Results: A total of 200 patients were included (M2B n=130, community n=70). Thirty-day readmission rates were similar between groups (16.2% vs. 15.7%; RR 1.03, 95% CI 0.58-2.01; p>0.999). No meaningful differences were observed at 7 days (5.2% vs. 4.8%; RR 1.08, 95% CI 0.31-3.85) or 14 days (9.9% vs. 7.8%; RR 1.27, 95% CI 0.49-3.36). Overall event rates were low, resulting in wide confidence intervals and limited precision of estimates.

Conclusions:
Meds to Beds was not associated with lower psychiatric readmission rates compared to community pharmacy pickup. These findings suggest medication delivery alone may have limited impact on readmissions and highlight the need to address broader factors influencing outcomes during transitions of care.

Moderators Presenters
avatar for Lexy Roman

Lexy Roman

PGY-1 Acute Care Pharmacy Resident, Geisinger Medical Center
Hi! My name is Alexis (Lexy) Roman, PharmD, and I am currently a PGY-1 Acute Care Pharmacy Resident at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, PA. I earned my Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Auburn University Harrison College of Pharmacy in Auburn, AL. Throughout my residency, I have... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 8

11:00am EDT

Evaluation of guideline concordant management of community acquired pneumonia in the emergency department at military treatment facilities
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Authors: Michael Remmel, PharmD; Memar Ayalew, PharmD, BCIDP, AAHIVP

Objectives: Evaluate the impact of provider education and an ED-specific outpatient order set on guideline-concordant antibiotic prescribing for CAP, characterize drivers of non-adherence, and assess associated clinical outcomes and adverse drug reactions.

Background
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a common cause of emergency department (ED) visits, and antibiotic prescribing often deviates from guideline selection, dose, and duration of therapy. This study evaluated whether an order set intervention improved adherence to local CAP guidelines.

Methods:
This retrospective, , pre-post intervention quasi-experimental quality improvement study evaluated CAP management at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center ED. Patients were included if >/= 18 years of age, diagnosed with CAP in the ED and received oral antibiotics upon discharge between July 1, 2025 and January 31, 2026 October 16, 2025, used as the pre- and post-intervention cutoff. Prescribing trends were compared before and after intervention which included provider education, implementation of an emergency department-specific updated outpatient protocol and creating a corresponding order set in the electronic medical record (EMR)Patients with recent oral or intravenous antibiotic exposure, recent hospitalization or ED visits, concurrent infections, no discharge antibiotic, or poor demographic data were excluded. The primary outcome was rate of  local guideline-concordant antibiotic therapy selection ; secondary outcomes included regimen selection, dose, frequency, duration, and treatment outcomes. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize prescribing patterns and outcomes.

Results:
Of 111 screened patients, 82 patients met inclusion criteria, including 28 pre-intervention and 54 post-intervention. Guideline-concordant antibiotic selection increased from 10.7% in the pre-intervention period to 22.2% post-intervention period. Prescriptions for 3- to 5-day treatment durations increased from 35.7% to 53.7%, while durations of at least 6 days decreased from 64.3% to 46.3%. Use of non-preferred antibiotic regimens categorized as “other” decreased from 50.0% to 25.9%. Common drivers of nonadherence were medication selection (36.0% vs 40.5%), duration (24.0% vs 21.4%), and multiple discordant components (36.0% vs 35.7%).

Conclusion:
Education and outpatient CAP order set implementation were associated with improved guideline-concordant prescribing in the ED, particularly for antibiotic selection and shortening durations of therapy. These findings support continuing antimicrobial stewardship efforts in the ED and further order set refinement to improve discharge prescribing quality.
Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters
avatar for Michael Remmel

Michael Remmel

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, United States Air Force
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 3

11:00am EDT

Evaluation of therapeutic enoxaparin dosing strategies in hospitalized patients with morbid obesity
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Title: Evaluation of therapeutic enoxaparin dosing strategies in hospitalized patients with morbid obesity

Authors: Huelena Nguyen, PharmD; Nina Jacob, PharmD, BCPS; Priya Shah, PharmD, BCPS; Jessica Roth, PharmD, BCPS, CDCES; Shannan Shelton, PharmD, BCACP

Objective: Identify differences in bleeding outcomes between standard (1-1.5 mg/kg) and reduced (<1 mg/kg) therapeutic enoxaparin dosing in patients with morbid obesity

Self Assessment Question: Which of the following statements is true regarding therapeutic enoxaparin dosing in patients with morbid obesity?
  1. Reduced dosing is consistently recommended due to increased bleeding risk 
  2. Standard dosing may still be appropriate despite concerns for bleeding 
  3. Anti Xa monitoring has no utility in obesity 
  4. Dosing is similar in patients with obesity compared to patients of normal weight 

Background: The objective of this study is to compare bleeding outcomes between standard and reduced dosing strategies in hospitalized adults with morbid obesity treated for venous thromboembolism

Methods: This multicenter, retrospective, observational case-cohort study evaluated adult inpatients ordered enoxaparin from the therapeutic enoxaparin dosing order set between July 1, 2023 to June 30, 2025 at ChristianaCare hospitals. Patients were included if they were at least 18 years old and had a body mass index (BMI) ≧40 kg/m2 or weight ≧150 kg and received at least 24 hours of therapy, while patients with a creatinine clearance <30 mL/min, intensive care unit admission, pregnancy or postpartum, recent trauma, known bleeding disorders, thrombocytopenia, cirrhosis, or history of heparin induced thrombocytopenia were excluded. Data collected included weight, enoxaparin dose, indication, concomitant medications, anti-Xa levels, and clinical outcomes, including major bleeding, minor bleeding, and thrombotic events. Descriptive statistics were used to evaluate baseline characteristics and categorical outcomes were compared using chi-square tests.

Results: A total of 1566 patients were screened, and 116 patients met inclusion criteria. The primary outcome is the proportion of major bleeding events during therapy and within 24 hours of discontinuation. Four major bleeding events (3.96%) occurred in the standard dose group compared to one event (6.67%) in the reduced dose group (p=0.506). Secondary outcomes include the proportion of minor bleeding events, therapeutic anti-Xa levels, and characterization of reduced dosing in patients with morbid obesity. Three minor bleeding events (2.87%) occurred in the standard dose group, and three events (20%) occurred in the reduced dose group (p=0.028). There was an inability to determine statistically significant differences for the remaining outcomes.

Conclusion: These findings suggest that there may be a difference in bleeding events between standard and reduced dosing strategies. The results of this study will provide insight into prescribing patterns of therapeutic enoxaparin in patients with morbid obesity and evaluate the safety of reduced dosing strategies. This will help support optimization of treatment guidelines in this high-risk population, but still highlights the need for ongoing evaluation in patients with BMI ≥40 kg/m².
Moderators
SY

Sylvia Yeager

PACT Clinical Pharmacy Practitioner, JEVZ VAMC
Presenters
avatar for Huelena Nguyen

Huelena Nguyen

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, ChristianaCare
Huelena Nguyen, PharmD is currently a PGY-1 Acute Care Pharmacy Resident at ChristianaCare in Newark, DE. She earned her Doctor of Pharmacy from the Thomas Jefferson University College of Pharmacy in May 2025. Upon completion of this residency year, she plans to practice as an ambulatory... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Steve Dolley

Steve Dolley

Clinical Pharmacist/Manager, Residency Program Director, Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital
Board certified clinical pharmacist/manager at a 320 inpatient psychiatric facility. Residency Program Director.
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 7

11:00am EDT

Impact of bromocriptine on suspected neurogenic fever - Maeghan Biché
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Title: Impact of bromocriptine on suspected neurogenic fever
Authors: Maeghan Biché, PharmD; Benjamin Wilkinson, PharmD, BCCCP; Haley Kavelak, PharmD, BCCCP; Julia Bold, PharmD
Objective: Audience members will be able to describe the impact of bromocriptine on fever in patients presenting with suspected neurogenic fever.
Self-Assessment Question: What patient population(s) may benefit most from bromocriptine use based on this study?
Background: Bromocriptine is hypothesized to have an antipyretic effect in patients with neurogenic fever, however the evidence is limited to small retrospective studies. This study aims to describe the impact of bromocriptine on neurogenic fever.
Methods: This retrospective chart review included adult patients admitted to the neurological intensive care unit (ICU) who received at least one dose of bromocriptine for suspected neurogenic fever between 6/1/2020 and 6/1/2025. The primary outcome was the change in maximum body temperature (Tmax) from the 24-hour period prior to bromocriptine administration (day 0) to the 48-to-72-hour period after initial administration (day 3). Secondary outcomes included change in Tmax from day 0 compared to 0 to 24 hours after administration (day 1) and 24 to 48 hours after administration (day 2), duration of fever, ICU length of stay (LOS), hospital LOS, and mortality 30 days after bromocriptine administration. Outcomes were analyzed by Mann-Whitney U test.
Results: A total of 75 patients were included in the analysis with a median age of 53 years. Administration of bromocriptine resulted in a significant decrease in temperature on day 3 (38.8 ºC vs 38.2 ºC, p < 0.001). The median dose of bromocriptine administered was 15mg on day 1, 30mg on day 2, and 40mg on day 3. Patients with a traumatic injury (n=22) had a greater reduction in fever compared to those with a non-traumatic injury at 72 hours (-0.8 ºC vs -0.5 ºC, p=0.002). The median duration of fever was 2 days. Hypotension occurred in 27 patients after administration, and 20 patients experienced nausea.
Conclusion: In patients with suspected neurogenic fever, bromocriptine may be an option for temperature reduction when added to other antipyretics. Patients with traumatic injury demonstrated a greater reduction in fever, suggesting greater efficacy in this population. Further investigation into dosing strategies is needed.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Maeghan Biché, PharmD

Maeghan Biché, PharmD

PGY1, St. Luke's University Health Network, Bethlehem Campus
2025 graduate of Duquesne University School of Pharmacy. Current PGY-1 pharmacy resident at St. Luke's University Health Network and incoming PGY-2 in critical care for the network. Interests include surgical/trauma intensive care and transitions of care. 
Evaluators
avatar for Ryan Whisler

Ryan Whisler

Clinical Coordinator, Health Outcomes and Research, Johns Hopkins Care at Home

Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 5

11:00am EDT

Clinical outcomes of full-dose vs. renally adjusted oral beta-lactams in gram-negative bloodstream infections
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Title : Clinical outcomes of full-dose vs. renally adjusted oral beta-lactams in gram-negative bloodstream infections

Authors : Sadaf Gharibi, PharmD; Sarah Valiante, PharmD, BCIDP; Samantha Stewart, PharmD, BCOP; Antoinette Acbo, PharmD, BCIDP

Objective: Assess the effect of oral beta-lactam dosing on 90-day all-cause mortality and other clinical outcomes in patients with gram-negative bloodstream infections (GN BSI)

Self assessment question: 
  • Which of the following patients would be the best candidate for transition from intravenous therapy to oral cefuroxime for gram-negative bloodstream infections?
    • A) In the ICU on norepinephrine drip
    • B) Clinically stable after > 48 hours of IV antibiotic, tolerating oral intake
    • C) Intra-abdominal abscess without source control 
    • D) ESBL-producing organisms not susceptible to available oral beta-lactams

Background: Studies suggest that the higher recurrence with oral beta-lactams (BL) in treating GN BSI may be due to suboptimal dosing and preserved renal function. This study evaluates the effect of oral (PO) BL dosing on clinical outcomes.

Methods: This single center retrospective study was conducted from January 2025 to June 2025. The primary outcome was 90-day all-cause mortality in patients with GN BSIs treated with full dose versus renally adjusted PO  BL. Secondary outcomes included 90-day hospital readmission, relapse of bloodstream infection at 90 days, total intravenous (IV) and PO antibiotic days, and length of hospital stay. Patients included were adults with GN BSI treated with PO step down BL following at least 48 hours of empiric IV therapy. Exclusion criteria included complicated infections requiring prolonged IV therapy, concomitant use of non-BL PO antibiotics active against the index isolate, received PO BL to which the index organism in blood or other culture was not susceptible, and expiration within 48 hours of appropriate therapy. PO antibiotic use trends were also evaluated.

Results:
Among the 237 included patients (Median age: 74, 123 male (51.9%), 202 patients had good renal function and 37 patients had bad renal function. The primary outcome (90-day all-cause mortality) occurred in 5 patients with good and 5 patients with bad renal function, and good renal function was associated with significantly lower odds of 90-day all-cause mortality compared with bad renal function (OR:0.10, 95% CI 0.01-0.73, p=0.025). No significant association was observed for 90-day readmission (OR 0.51, 95% CI 0.20-1.26, p=0.145) or recurrence (OR 0.91, 95% CI 0.13-7.89, p=0.921). Antibiotic dosing strategy (dose-adjusted vs. full dose) was not significantly associated with any of the outcomes.

Conclusion:
In this retrospective study of adults with GN BSI treated with PO step down BL, the odds of 90-day all cause mortality was significantly lower in patients with good renal function. No significant difference was observed in the rate of 90-day readmission or recurrence among groups. Collectively, the result of the study suggested that dosing strategy of PO BLs (full dose vs renally dose adjusted), may have no impact on 90-day mortality, hospitalization and recurrence in patients with GN BSI.
Moderators
avatar for Carolyn Orendorff

Carolyn Orendorff

System Director of Clinical Pharmacy Services, ChristianaCare
Attended University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. Completed PGY1-PGY2 Pharmacotherapy Residency at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Currently works as Director of Clinical Pharmacy at ChristianaCare. 
Presenters
avatar for Sadaf Gharibi

Sadaf Gharibi

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Jersey Shore University Medical Center
Evaluators
CF

Charisa Flaherty

RPD, Winchester Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 11:00am - 11:20am EDT
Room 4

11:20am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 2

11:20am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 1

11:20am EDT

Evaluation of subcutaneous furosemide prescribing patterns and perceptions among cardiology providers in patients with heart failure
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Title: Evaluation of subcutaneous furosemide prescribing patterns and perceptions among cardiology providers in patients with heart failure

Authors: Ashley Mayes, PharmD, MPH, Keturah DelGrosso, PharmD, BCPS, Danielle Karaffa, PharmD, BCPS, Michael DiMaggio, PharmD Sarah Krahe Dombrowski, PharmD, BCACP

Learning Objective: Identify potential barriers and knowledge gaps influencing the use of subcutaneous (SQ) furosemide in the ambulatory cardiology setting for patients with heart failure (HF).

Self-Assessment Question: Potential barriers of SQ furosemide use in the ambulatory setting include insurance or prior authorization issues, out-of-pocket expense to patients, and concerns surrounding patient self-administration (True/False)

Background: Subcutaneous (SQ) furosemide is an alternative to IV furosemide for HF exacerbation due to equal bioavailability and ambulatory administration. This study examined cardiology provider perceptions of SQ furosemide in ambulatory HF patients.

Methods: This retrospective mixed-methods analysis was conducted via Epic SlicerDicer and surveys distributed to Geisinger cardiology providers and cardiology pharmacists.  Epic SlicerDicer was utilized to identify patients with active SQ furosemide prescriptions as well as those who may have been potential candidates for SQ furosemide based on a proposed high-risk criteria. Survey participants received an email with an overview of the project, education regarding SQ furosemide, and the survey link as well as a reminder email at 7 and 14 days. The survey was open from 3/3/2026 to 3/20/2026. Multiple choice, select all that apply, ranking, Likert-type and open-ended questions were utilized to identify clinical perceptions and potential barriers of SQ furosemide prescribing in the outpatient cardiology setting as well as gather provider insight on appropriate patient selection criteria for SQ furosemide use.  Data was anonymously collected via Microsoft Forms and analyzed via Microsoft Excel.

Results: Preliminary analysis of quantitative data revealed that that of 94,833 adult patients with HF at Geisinger, 23 had an active prescription for SQ furosemide between 10/10/22-10/1/25. Of those with HF, 3,079 were on a maintenance oral loop diuretic regimen of ≥ 40 mg furosemide daily or equivalent AND had at least 1 hospitalization or emergency department (ED) visit for HF within the past 6 months OR were administered an IV loop diuretic for HF within the past 6 months - indicating that they could potentially benefit from SQ furosemide. The survey was sent to 128 participants and received 13 (10.2%) responses. Qualitative survey results are currently being analyzed and results will be reported at the conference.  

Conclusion: Survey results showed most providers have positive clinical perceptions of SQ furosemide and find it at least somewhat beneficial for outpatient management of HF exacerbation.  A major perceived barrier to SQ furosemide prescribing identified was cost concern.  Given the positive response from clinicians, a subsequent cost analysis of SQ furosemide versus alternatives was presented to pharmacy leadership for potential implementation.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Ashley Mayes

Ashley Mayes

My name is Ashley Mayes.  I am a current PGY1 pharmacy resident in the Gesinger Clinic West program. I am a 2025 graduate of the Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine School of Pharmacy where I obtained my PharmD and MPH. 
Evaluators
avatar for Vi Nguyen

Vi Nguyen

Clinical Pharmacist II, IMVH hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 6

11:20am EDT

Characterization of serum thiocyanate monitoring in sodium nitroprusside use
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Sydney Jablonski, PharmD1, William Cahoon, PharmD, BCPS, BCCP, BCCCP1, Cassandra Baker, PharmD1
Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Health System Department of Pharmacy Services1
Learning Objective: Describe thiocyanate monitoring and factors associated with accumulation in patients receiving sodium nitroprusside.
Background/objective: The purpose of this project is to characterize current thiocyanate monitoring in patients receiving sodium nitroprusside. Results will be utilized to update thiocyanate monitoring practices and optimize resource utilization.
Methods: This project is a retrospective, single-center review from January 2022 to July 2025. Adult Coronary ICU patients who received intravenous sodium nitroprusside for at least 24 hours, and had at least one thiocyanate level obtained were included. Baseline characteristics, including age, sex, race, renal function, liver function, and mechanical circulatory support, were collected. Patients were categorized into two groups: those with and those without thiocyanate accumulation. Thiocyanate accumulation was defined as at least one thiocyanate level >30 mcg/mL. Nitroprusside factors, including cumulative nitroprusside dose, duration of nitroprusside therapy, peak nitroprusside infusion rate, peak thiocyanate level, and number of thiocyanate levels were obtained for all included patients. Symptoms of thiocyanate toxicity were assessed for each patient via Epic chart review.
Results: Sixty-nine patients were included in this study with only 10 patients (14.5%) demonstrating thiocyanate accumulation. Patients with thiocyanate accumulation had a higher dosing weight (103 kg vs. 83.3 kg), a higher cumulative nitroprusside dose (23.08 vs. 4.25 mg/kg), a longer duration of nitroprusside infusion (588.5 vs. 213 hours), and a higher peak nitroprusside infusion rate (0.8 vs. 0.5 mcg/kg/min) compared to those without accumulation. Six patients (8.7%) had symptoms of thiocyanate toxicity documented. A total of 625 thiocyanate levels were collected, of which 46.6% were undetectable (< 5 mcg/ml) and 10.1% were greater than 30 mcg/mL.
Conclusions: This project found an association between dosing weight, cumulative nitroprusside dose, duration of nitroprusside therapy, and peak nitroprusside infusion rate with thiocyanate accumulation. Given that a large percentage of thiocyanate levels obtained were undetectable, opportunities exist to decrease the frequency of thiocyanate monitoring to improve resource utilization and provide cost savings.
Self-Assessment Question:
What factor was associated with thiocyanate accumulation in patients receiving nitroprusside?
a) Liver function
b) Sex
c) Age
d) Duration of nitroprusside infusion
Moderators Presenters Evaluators
avatar for Ryan Whisler

Ryan Whisler

Clinical Coordinator, Health Outcomes and Research, Johns Hopkins Care at Home


Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 5

11:20am EDT

Appropriateness of Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis Prescribing in Acutely Ill Medical Patients
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Title: Appropriateness of venous thromboembolism prophylaxis prescribing in acutely ill medical patients 

Authors: Seharpreet Sethi, PharmD; Geoffrey Arentz, PharmD, BCPS; Christine Higgins, RPh, BCPS 

Learning Objective: Audience members will be able to identify patients who are appropriate to receive venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis.  

Self Assessment Question: At the conclusion of my presentation, the participant will be able to recognize appropriate prescribing of VTE prophylaxis.

Background/Objective: The purpose of this study was to identify the appropriate usage of VTE prophylaxis in the inpatient setting. Guidelines for VTE prophylaxis refer to the IMPROVE VTE and Bleed scores as a method of risk assessment before starting. 

Methods: This retrospective chart review included patients >18 years admitted in three medical floors, medical, and cardiac ICU, who received VTE prophylaxis between July 1 and August 8, 2025. The exclusion criteria included admissions for bleeds, pregnant and postpartum patients, repeat admissions, and therapeutic anticoagulation orders. The primary objective was the percentage of inappropriate VTE prophylaxis prescribing, based on IMPROVE VTE and IMPROVE Bleed scores. Secondary outcomes include bleeding 48 hours after last dose of prophylaxis given, the percentage of patients ineligible based on their IMPROVE VTE score, percentage of patients ineligible based on their IMPROVE Bleed score, and percentage of appropriate VTE prophylaxis prescribing in the ICU compared to non-ICU settings.  

Results: A total of 248 patients met the inclusion criteria, and 64 patients were excluded, leading to a total of 184 patients being studied. The primary objective revealed that 69% of total included patients had inappropriately received VTE prophylaxis based on their IMPROVE scores. Looking at the secondary outcomes, 3 patients experienced a bleed. 2 of these patients were ineligible to receive prophylaxis, while 1 was eligible. 67% of patients deemed ineligible for VTE prophylaxis did not meet criteria to start due to a low IMPROVE VTE score. Overall, percentages of ineligible and eligible patients were similar between ICU and non-ICU patients.. 
 
Conclusion: Application of the IMPROVE VTE and Bleeding risk scores to assess appropriateness for VTE prophylaxis suggests that prophylaxis may be overprescribed in the inpatient setting, including both ICU and non-ICU populations. Pharmacists in different practice areas should continuously evaluate a patient’s risk of VTE and bleeding to potentially deescalate prophylactic prescribing, which could improve patient satisfaction and cost savings. 

Moderators Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 8

11:20am EDT

Evaluation of a Pharmacy-Managed Weight Loss Program in the VA Healthcare System One Year Post-Implementation
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Title: Evaluation of a Pharmacy-Managed Weight Loss Program in the VA Healthcare System One Year Post-Implementation
Authors: 
Melissa Contreras PharmD; Tanvi Patil, MPH, PharmD, BCPS, DPLA; Brandi Sugonis, PharmD, BCACP; John Minchak, BS, PharmD, MBA, BCPS, BCGP; Alamdeep Kaur, PharmD, BCPS; Jena Willis, PharmD, Kayla Williams

Presentation Objective: At the conclusion of my presentation, the participant will be able to evaluate the effectiveness of a pharmacy-managed weight loss program within the VA Healthcare System one year after its implementation.
 
Self-Assessment Question: True or false: There is greater follow-up in patients managed by a CPP compared to a non-CPP.

Background: Obesity is a chronic disease associated with significant morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs, yet it remains undertreated despite the availability of effective pharmacologic therapies. Weight loss medications have demonstrated meaningful reductions in body weight, along with improvements in cardiovascular outcomes however, clinical inertia has limited their use. Contributing factors include limited provider time and lack of healthcare resources. Clinical Pharmacy Practitioners (CPPs) can fill this gap by supporting medication optimization, education, and monitoring to improve weight management care.  This study aims to evaluate the impact of pharmacist managed weight loss program (PMWP) at a single center rural VA healthcare system one year post implementation.

Methods: This single-center quality improvement study evaluated a PMWP implemented in collaboration with VA MOVE! program dietician (weight management program for veterans). Weight loss medications were managed by either a CPP or other providers.  Patients with less than 6 months of follow-up after medication initiation, therapy discontinuation, or those transferred to another facility within a 6-month period were excluded. The primary outcome was to compare the proportion of patients achieving ≥5% weight loss within 6 months in the CPP versus non-CPP groups. Secondary outcomes included the proportion of patients achieving ≥5% weight loss by the end of the study and the mean difference in the average weight loss % achieved between the two groups at 6 months and end of study period. Patients who were followed for >6 months an additional weight was recorded at last follow-up to calculate weight loss at the end of the study period. The primary outcome was evaluated using chi-square test or Fisher’s exact. Continuous variables were compared using Student t-test or Mann-Whitney U test.
 
Results
The preliminary analysis of our study is included currently as the data collection is still in progress. A total of 161 patients were reviewed. After applying exclusion criteria, where non-completion of at least 6 months of weight loss medication therapy was the most common reason for exclusion, the study had a sample of 54 patients to be included. The study included 47 patients in CPP group and 7 patients in non-CPP managed group. The mean age was 58.1 years, height was 69.9-inches, and weight was 324.5 lbs. Majority of patients were non-Hispanic, white male with type 2 diabetes. The most common comorbidities included type 2 diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and obstructive sleep apnea. The most prescribed weight loss medication was tirzepatide followed by semaglutide.
At 6 months proportion of patients who achieved at least 5% of weight loss in CPP vs. non-CPP group were 25 (71.43%) vs. 3 (42.86%) with p-value 0.197 while at the end of the study period the proportion of patients were CPP 27 (81.82%) vs. non-CPP 3 (42.86%) and p-value of 0.052 respectively. At the end of 6 months and end of study period mean weight loss in CPP vs. non-CPP group was 31.86 vs. 13.19 lbs. P-value of 0.03 and 35.69 vs. 13.71 lbs. with p-value of 0.03 respectively. The mean percent weight loss achieved in CPP vs. non-CPP group was 9.74% vs. 3.8% at 6 months and 11.54% vs.4.32% at the end of study period.
 
Conclusion
Overall, our study shows at the preliminary analyses that patients enrolled in the CPP group had higher proportion of patients achieving at least 5% of weight loss and the mean weight loss achieved was significantly higher in the CPP group as compared to the non-CPP group.

Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 3

11:20am EDT

Duration of antibiotic therapy for hospital-acquired pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia: a single-center, retrospective cohort study of five versus seven days of therapy
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
  • Title: Duration of antibiotic therapy for hospital-acquired pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia: a single-center, retrospective cohort study of five versus seven days of therapy
  • Authors: Tejona Johnson-Moore, PharmD; Olubusola Fowowe, PharmD, BCIPD; Sarah Graziose, PharmD, BCPS, BCID
  • Learning Objective: Evaluate the impact of using a shorter versus standard antibiotic therapy for hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated pneumonia
  • Background/Objective: This study’s objective is to assess whether reducing the antibiotic treatment duration to 5 days yields similar clinical outcomes as 7 days of antibiotic therapy in patients with hospital-acquired pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia.
  • Methods: This retrospective, single-center cohort study was conducted at a level one trauma and academic center and included patients diagnosed with hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) or ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) between January 1, 2023, and August 31, 2025. The primary outcome was 30-day mortality, with secondary outcomes including recurrent pneumonia, in-hospital mortality, and adverse events. Secondary outcomes included recurrent pneumonia, in-hospital mortality, and 30-day all-cause mortality. Enrolled patients were adults at least 18 years old with a clinical diagnosis of hospital-acquired or ventilator-associated pneumonia who were receiving appropriate antibiotic therapy according to the micro-organism
  • Results: There were 144 patients that met the inclusion criteria. Among the 144 patients diagnosed with pneumonia, 119 had 7 days of antibiotic therapy, while 25 had 5 days. At 30 days, no difference in mortality was observed between the 5-day and 7-day therapy groups. However, non-inferiority could not be demonstrated. Findings were consistent across adjusted and sensitivity analyses.
  • Conclusion: According to the study’s findings, 5-day antibiotic therapy can’t be concluded to have similar clinical outcomes as patients on a 7-day regimen needed for hospital-associated pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia. Using a shorter antibiotic course is a potential option for clinically improving individuals. However, it is not suggested that it should be in place of using a 7-day course for pneumonia eradication
  • Self-assessment Question: Based on this study’s results, which of the following represents the most appropriate clinical application for patients diagnosed with either HAP or VAP?
  • A. All patients diagnosed with HAP and VAP should be given 5 days of therapy
  • B. Continue the 7-day antibiotic therapy as the standard regimen, with consideration of using a 5-day treatment duration in patients demonstrating clear clinical improvement
  • C. Avoid using 5-day antibiotic regimens in patients diagnosed with either HAP or VAP
Moderators
avatar for Carolyn Orendorff

Carolyn Orendorff

System Director of Clinical Pharmacy Services, ChristianaCare
Attended University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. Completed PGY1-PGY2 Pharmacotherapy Residency at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Currently works as Director of Clinical Pharmacy at ChristianaCare. 
Presenters
avatar for Tejona Johnson-Moore, PharmD, RPh

Tejona Johnson-Moore, PharmD, RPh

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, MedStar Washington Hospital Center
Howard University College of Pharmacy ‘25 Graduate Joining the workforce post residency  Current member of WMSHP and ASHP
Evaluators
CF

Charisa Flaherty

RPD, Winchester Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 4

11:20am EDT

Evaluation of AUC vs. Trough-Based Vancomycin Dosing in the Outpatient Setting
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT

Evaluation of AUC vs. Trough-Based Vancomycin Dosing in the Outpatient Setting
Lauren Yates, PharmD; Adam Archer, PharmD, BCIDP; SungHo Park, PharmD 
 
Learning Objective  
Audience members will be able to identify key benefits of area-the-under-curve-based vancomycin dosing in the home health setting.  

Background/Objective
The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and utility of using Bayesian-software-assisted 24-hour area-the-under-curve (AUC24) monitoring to dose vancomycin compared to trough-based dosing in the home infusion setting.   

Methods  
This single-center, retrospective, quasi-experimental pre-post study included patients ≥18 years old who were discharged on ≥ 7 days on intravenous vancomycin and enrolled in our institutional outpatient parenteral antimicrobial therapy (OPAT) monitoring program. Exclusion criteria included outpatient labs delayed by more than 14 days at any point in therapy. The primary endpoint was the incidence of acute kidney injury (AKI), defined as ≥ 0.5 mg/dl or ≥ 50% increase in serum creatinine from baseline within 7 days. Efficacy endpoints include 90-day all-cause mortality, infection-related 30-day readmission, and change in antibiotic therapy due to clinical worsening. Utility endpoints include the number of labs collected during outpatient therapy. Data was collected via manual chart review and included baseline demographics, renal function, infection characteristics, concomitant nephrotoxic medications, and vancomycin regimen details.   

Results
This study found that AUC-based vancomycin monitoring significantly reduced the risk of nephrotoxicity in the outpatient setting. A total of 258 patients' encounters were screened with 158 meeting inclusion criteria, which yielded 79 patients in both the AUC and trough monitoring cohorts. Baseline characteristics were well matched between groups. AUC-guided dosing significantly reduced the rates of AKI compared to trough-based dosing (7.6% vs 24.1%), corresponding to a risk ratio of 0.32 (95% CI 0.13–0.75; p=0.005). The median number of labs per weeks of therapy was significantly reduced in the AUC arm (0.95 vs. 1.22, p<0.001), resulting in an average cost saving of $450 per week.    
 
Conclusion
This study observed a significant reduction in AKI with AUC-guided vancomycin therapeutic drug monitoring in the home health setting, supporting guideline recommendations favoring AUC over trough-based monitoring in a patient population with limited data. As outpatient lab monitoring is often limited, AUC-guided vancomycin monitoring may improve patient outcomes by reducing adverse effects leading to readmission or early vancomycin discontinuation.

Self Assessment Question: 
True or False: There was a significant reduction in acute kidney injury in AUC-monitored patients compared to traditional trough-based monitoring in the outpatient setting.
Moderators
SY

Sylvia Yeager

PACT Clinical Pharmacy Practitioner, JEVZ VAMC
Presenters
avatar for Lauren Yates

Lauren Yates

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, University of Virginia Health
Dr. Lauren Yates, PharmD, is a PGY1 pharmacy resident at the University of Virginia (UVA) Medical Center. Lauren graduated with a B.S. in Chemistry from the University of Pittsburgh in 2020 followed by a PharmD from the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy in 2025. Following... Read More →
Evaluators
avatar for Steve Dolley

Steve Dolley

Clinical Pharmacist/Manager, Residency Program Director, Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital
Board certified clinical pharmacist/manager at a 320 inpatient psychiatric facility. Residency Program Director.
Friday May 15, 2026 11:20am - 11:40am EDT
Room 7

11:40am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 2

11:40am EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 1

11:40am EDT

Evaluation of serotonergic medications for depression and anxiety prior to cardiac transplantation
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Authors: Leah Dykstra, PharmD; Emily Burns, PharmD; Abigail Mathes, PharmD; Mary Roth, PharmD, BCCP, BCPS 
Objective: Audience members will be able to quantify the frequency of changes made to serotonergic medications for depression and anxiety at UVA Health during the listing period due to the potential need for methylene blue to manage vasoplegia.
Background: Depression/anxiety are common in cardiac transplant candidates and many take serotonergic medications. These increase serotonin syndrome risk if methylene blue is used for perioperative vasoplegia, so medications may be changed before transplant.
Methods: This retrospective, observational study included adults who underwent cardiac transplant at UVA Health between January 1, 2014 and July 1, 2025. Patients taking serotonergic medications for depression/anxiety during the listing period were included in the primary analysis. Medications were classified as high or non-high risk based on serotonin syndrome potential if used with methylene blue. The high risk group included patients taking >1 high risk medications, while the non-high risk group included patients taking only non-high risk medications. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with medication changes during the listing period. Secondary endpoints included frequency of depression/anxiety, serotonergic medication use within 72 hours pre-transplant, vasoplegia and its management, serotonin syndrome, and post-transplant medication re-initiation. Data were collected via electronic medical record review and analyzed using descriptive statistics and chi-square tests.
Results: Among 111 cardiac transplant patients, 41 were on >1 serotonergic medications for depression/anxiety during the listing period (28 in the high risk group and 13 in the non-high risk group). Medication changes occurred in 23 (79%) patients in the high risk group versus 6 (21%) in the non-high risk group (p=0.029). Within 72 hours of transplant, 12 patients were in the high risk group and 16 in the non-high risk group. Vasoplegia occurred in 5 (42%) high risk group patients (0 received methylene blue) and 5 (31%) non-high risk group patients, of whom 2 (40%) received methylene blue. No cases of serotonin syndrome were documented.
Conclusions: Medication changes prior to cardiac transplant were more frequent in the high risk group than in the non-high risk group, likely to reduce serotonin syndrome risk with potential methylene blue use. However, no high risk group patients received methylene blue or developed serotonin syndrome. These findings suggest pre-transplant serotonergic medication changes may offer limited benefit and risk worsening depression/anxiety, especially at institutions where alternatives to methylene blue are used.
Self-assessment question: Based on UVA practice and the data presented in this project, which of the following would be a reasonable recommendation to make for a patient listed for cardiac transplant who takes sertraline and buspirone for depression/anxiety?
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Leah Dykstra

Leah Dykstra

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, UVA Health
Leah is a PGY1 pharmacy resident at UVA Health in Charlottesville, VA. She is originally from Andover, NJ and completed pharmacy school at West Virginia University. After completing her PGY1 year, Leah will stay at UVA Health and complete a PGY2 in cardiology. 
Evaluators
avatar for Ryan Whisler

Ryan Whisler

Clinical Coordinator, Health Outcomes and Research, Johns Hopkins Care at Home

Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 5

11:40am EDT

Implementation of a pharmacy-driven allergy reconciliation process for beta-lactam allergies
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Implementation of allergy reconciliation for beta-lactam allergies

Authors: Mark Angel, PharmD; Lori Belle Slone, PharmD, BCPS; Jessica Sobnosky, PharmD, BCPS, BCIDPObjective: •Audience members will be able to apply the PEN-FAST tool during medication reconciliation to risk-stratify beta-lactam allergies.

UDIEBackground: Inaccurate beta-lactam (BL) allergy documentation limits first-line antibiotic use and promotes broad-spectrum alternatives. This study evaluates whether pharmacy led allergy reconciliation improves documentation accuracy and antimicrobial selection.Methods: This study reviewed electronic health records of patients ≥18 years with a documented beta-lactam (BL) allergy who underwent pharmacist-led allergy reconciliation between November 1, 2025, and March 1, 2026. Allergy documentation was evaluated for accuracy and clinical relevance following reconciliation. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with updated BL allergy documentation. Secondary outcomes included the proportion of patients with antimicrobial therapy modification and BL utilization following clarification. Data were collected via retrospective chart review at study completion, de-identified, and securely stored. Descriptive statistics were used, with categorical variables such as PEN-FAST risk levels and documentation rates reported as frequencies and percentages to identify gaps between clinical reconciliation and formal documentation practices.

Results: A total of 189 patients were eligible for inclusion with 50 being randomized for analysis. Risk stratification using the PEN-FAST tool identified 14 patients (28%) as very low risk, 19 (38%) as low risk, 15 (30%) as moderate risk, and 2 (4%) as high risk. The primary outcome of updated allergy documentation was achieved in one patient (2%). Regarding secondary outcomes, no modifications to antimicrobial therapy were observed during the initial admission following reconciliation. Prior to PEN-FAST assessment, 66% of low-risk patients were already receiving BL therapy. Zero adverse drug reactions related to BLs occurred during the study period.

Conclusion: Although pharmacy-led reconciliation did not result in immediate antimicrobial therapy changes, it identified a gap between allergy risk assessment and clinical decision-making. Most patients were low or very low risk by PEN-FAST and were already receiving beta-lactams. However, improved allergy documentation provides lasting value by supporting optimized antibiotic selection in future encounters and highlights the need for better use of validated assessment tools.

References:
Barlam TF, Cosgrove SE, Abbo LM, MacDougall C, Schuetz AN, Septimus EJ, Srinivasan A, Dellit TH, Falck-Ytter YT, Fishman NO, Hamilton CW, Jenkins TC, Lipsett PA, Malani PN, May LS, Moran GJ, Neuhauser MM, Newland JG, Ohl CA, Platt R, Polk RE, Sandora TJ, Tamma PD, Trivedi KK. Implementing an antibiotic stewardship program: guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin Infect Dis. 2016;62(10):e51–e77.

Blumenthal KG, Peter JG, Trubiano JA, Phillips EJ. Antibiotic allergy. Lancet. 2019;393(10167):183–198.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Antibiotic use in the United States: penicillin allergy. Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2021.

Macy E, Contreras R. Health care use and serious infection prevalence associated with penicillin “allergy” in hospitalized patients: a cohort study. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2014;133(3):790–796.

Torres MJ, Adkinson NF Jr, Caubet JC, Khan DA, Kidon MI, Mendelson L, Gomes ER, Rerkpattanapipat T, Zhang S, Macy E; AAAAI/WAO 2018 Symposium Penicillin and Cephalosporin Allergy Testing Working Group. Controversies in drug allergy: beta-lactam hypersensitivity testing. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2019;7(1):40–45.

Trubiano JA, Vogrin S, Kruse O, Phillips EJ. Development and validation of a penicillin allergy clinical decision rule. JAMA Intern Med. 2020;180(5):745–752


Moderators Presenters
avatar for Mark Angel

Mark Angel

PGY-1 Resident, UK KDMC
Evaluators
avatar for Vi Nguyen

Vi Nguyen

Clinical Pharmacist II, IMVH hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 6

11:40am EDT

Resident Presentation - Oyinlola Shofolawe-Bakare
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Title: Implementation gap in mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist use in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction
Authors: Oyinlola Shofolawe-Bakare, PharmD; Scott Baker, PharmD, BCPS.
Learning objective: Audience members will be able to identify reasons for non-initiation of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist in eligible heart failure patients with reduced ejection fraction and assess whether reasons are appropriate or if interventions could have been made to prevent non-initiation.
Self-assessment question: Which of the following non-initiation reasons can an intervention be potentially made to allow for initiation of MRA on discharge without the need for continuous monitoring?
 A.) Acute kidney injury
 B.) Acute hyperkalemia
 C.) Low blood pressure
 D.) None of these
Background: The objective of the study was to review hospitalized patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) to identify reasons for non-initiation of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs) at hospital discharge and evaluate readmission rates within this group. The American college of cardiology/ American heart association guidelines recommend MRAs for optimized guideline directed medical therapy (GDMT) in patients with chronic HFrEF who remain symptomatic despite optimal dosing of (renin-angiotensin-aldosterone) RAAS inhibitors, beta blockers and other standard therapies. However, their use remains suboptimal in this demographic.
Methods: A single-center retrospective cohort study in adults with a HFrEF diagnosis and LVEF < 40% who at the time of discharge were eligible to receive an MRA but either received or did not receive an MRA on discharge. The primary outcome was 30-day heart failure readmission rates between patients who were not discharged on an MRA based on the reasons for non-initiation. Secondary outcomes included 30-day and 90-day hospital readmission rates among patients discharged with vs. without an MRA and 1-year mortality.
ResultsOf 278 patients screened, 218 met the eligibility criteria for the study. 121 patients received and continued MRA on discharge. 97 patients did not receive MRA on discharge. Non-initiation on discharge was determined by the physician. The reasons for non-initiation were largely undocumented for most patients. Other reasons included blood pressure, renal function, hyperkalemia or the patients were deferred to outpatient cardiology for follow-up. Hospital readmission rates in these groups were 13.0%, 11.8%, 33.3%, 0.0% and 14.3% respectively. There was no statistically significant difference in 30-day re-admission rates among the groups. For secondary outcomes, there was a statistically significant difference in 30-day (2.4% vs 19%) and 90-day (5.7% vs. 21%) hospital readmission rates among patients discharged with vs. without an MRA (p-value < 0.001). However, there was no difference in 1-year mortality in both groups (p-value = 0.50).
Conclusion: In this small, retrospective cohort study, majority of patients who were eligible for an MRA received one on discharge. In the group of patients who did not receive an MRA, reasons fell into a few categories. Although there was no difference in 30-day readmission rates within the non-MRA initiation group, this study highlights the importance of evaluating the appropriateness of non-initiation of therapy.
Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters
OS

Oyinlola Shofolawe-Bakare

PGY-1 Pharmacy Resident, TidalHealth Peninsula Regional
Oyinlola Shofolawe-Bakare, PharmD is a PGY-1 resident at TidalHealth Peninsula Regional in Salisbury, MD. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Temple University School of Pharmacy. Her interests include ambulatory care and internal medicine. She is a member of professional... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 3

11:40am EDT

Use of insulin NPH in patients with steroid-induced hyperglycemia
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Title: Use of insulin NPH in patients with steroid-induced hyperglycemia

Authors: McCleary D, Van Slyke B, Schaefer M, Calder T

Learning Objective: Evaluate the effects of insulin NPH on hyperglycemia management outcomes and safety considerations.

Self-Assessment Question: Which insulin strategy best aligns with the glucose-raising pattern of glucocorticoids in steroid-induced hyperglycemia?

Background/Objective: Glucocorticoids are widely used for their immunosuppressive and anti-inflammatory effects but often cause hyperglycemia. This study evaluates the effectiveness of NPH insulin versus non‑NPH regimens in managing steroid‑induced hyperglycemia.

Methods: A two‑month retrospective chart review will be conducted from November 1, 2025, to December 31, 2025, for patients started on glucocorticoid therapy who meet inclusion criteria. These patients, identified through an automated report, will serve as the intervention‑free control period. A subsequent two‑month prospective phase from January 1, 2026, to February 28, 2026, will evaluate the insulin NPH intervention. Included patients must be initiated on glucocorticoid therapy exceeding 10 mg prednisone equivalents per dose, have two or more blood glucose readings above 180 mg/dL in the first 24 hours of therapy or a history of diabetes, and be ≥18 years old. Exclusion criteria include hypoglycemia during the current admission, treatment for DKA or HHS, or age <18. The primary outcome is the rate of blood glucose readings >180 mg/dL while on glucocorticoids. The safety outcome is the rate of hypoglycemia events.

Results: A total of 42 patients met inclusion criteria, including 24 in the retrospective control group and 18 in the prospective insulin NPH group. Baseline characteristics were comparable between groups. There was no statistically significant difference in the rate of hyperglycemia between patients managed without insulin NPH and those receiving insulin NPH (43% vs 43%; P = 0.99). Among patients with ≥2 blood glucose readings >180 mg/dL within the first 24 hours of glucocorticoid initiation, the mean rate of hyperglycemia was 52% in the non–insulin NPH group and 43% in the insulin NPH group (P = 0.39). One hypoglycemia event occurred in the non–insulin NPH group compared with four events in the insulin NPH group.

Conclusion: Insulin NPH use for steroid‑induced hyperglycemia did not result in a statistically significant reduction in hyperglycemia compared with non–insulin NPH therapies. However, the pharmacodynamic profile of insulin NPH closely aligns with glucocorticoid‑related glucose elevations. Optimized dosing strategies, standardized protocols, and larger studies are needed to better define its role in managing steroid‑associated hyperglycemia.
Moderators Presenters Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 8

11:40am EDT

Cytomegalovirus prophylaxis dosing in post-transplant clinic after implementation of a pharmacist
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Authors: Victor E. Rojas Velazquez, Pharm.D., Rachel Savilla, Pharm.D., Nicole McCoy, Pharm.D., Safiyyah Mitchell, Pharm.D., Brian Burton, MS
Learning Objective: Identify areas where clinical pharmacists can serve a critical role in CMV prophylaxis dosing adjustments and rationale
Background/Objective: Studies have shown that pharmacist implementation can lead to minimization of adverse events in immunosuppression management. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of an outpatient transplant pharmacist on CMV prophylaxis appropriateness.
Methods: Medical records were reviewed as a retrospective cohort study of kidney transplant recipients at Charleston Area Medical Center between January 2024 and June 2025. Comparing outcomes before and after implementing a pharmacist-led intervention, stratification of cohorts was decided by initiation date of clinical pharmacist. Data collected consisted of renal function to assess appropriateness of CMV prophylaxis dosing, incidence of breakthrough CMV, other infections, bacteremia, graft, and patient survival using data up to 3 months post-transplant.
Results: CMV appropriateness was assessed for 76% of the 128 patients studied. A greater portion of patients were included in the control arm compared to the treatment arm (n = 59 versus 39). Statistical analysis for the appropriateness of renal dose adjustments between the two cohorts detected no difference when viewed from discharge up to 3 months post-transplant. Unexpectedly, renal dose adjustments between the cohorts during discharge showed statistical significance towards the control (0 versus 12.82% inappropriately adjusted, p = 0.0089). Secondary outcomes such as bacteremia (p = 0.4), other infections (p = 0.7) biopsy proven rejection (p = 0.4) showed no difference.
Conclusions: Lack of statistical significance for appropriate renal dose adjustments shown is likely due to limitations of retrospective analysis rather than lack of clinical significance. Statistical significance of the patients captured at discharge was attributed to multiple factors that were not accounted for during data analysis. Nonetheless, a positive trend for appropriate renal dose adjustments favored the post-pharmacist group, signifying potential benefit of the clinical pharmacist’s role.
Self- assessment question: What gaps can clinical transplant pharmacist focus on to avoid potential unwanted effects of non-renally dose adjusted valganciclovir?
Moderators
avatar for Carolyn Orendorff

Carolyn Orendorff

System Director of Clinical Pharmacy Services, ChristianaCare
Attended University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. Completed PGY1-PGY2 Pharmacotherapy Residency at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Currently works as Director of Clinical Pharmacy at ChristianaCare. 
Presenters
avatar for Victor Rojas Velazquez

Victor Rojas Velazquez

Resident, Charleston Area Medical Center
Victor is a PGY-1 Pharmacy resident at Charleston Area Medical Center. Graduated his PharmD degree from the University of Charleston School of Pharmacy in 2025. Current plans for future endeavors include searching for an inpatient staffing opportunity with involvement in the oncology... Read More →
Evaluators
CF

Charisa Flaherty

RPD, Winchester Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 4

11:40am EDT

Resident Presentation - Nadine Haidar
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Eastern States Abstract
Nadine Haidar, PharmD
Preceptors: Nicholas Pugliese, PharmD, BCCCP; Olubusola Fowowe, PharmD, BCIDP; Sarah Graziose, PharmD, BCPS, BCIDP
Title
Cefpodoxime versus cefdinir for the treatment of urinary tract infections in the emergency department: a retrospective cohort study
Learning Objective
Identify differences in treatment failure between cefpodoxime and cefdinir in emergency department patients with urinary tract infections.
Background/Objective
Cefpodoxime has more favorable pharmacokinetic properties than cefdinir, yet both are used for urinary tract infections. This study evaluates differences in treatment failure between these agents in emergency department patients.
Methods
This retrospective, single-center cohort study included adult emergency (ED) patients with uncomplicated or complicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) discharged on oral cefpodoxime or cefdinir (with or without a single IV dose) and able to tolerate oral therapy. Patients were excluded if they were admitted to the hospital, had catheter-associated infections, were pregnant, had concurrent infections, or received multiple antibiotics. The primary outcome was treatment failure within 14 days, defined as return visit to a medical facility (ED, urgent care, telehealth, or outpatient clinic) for worsening urinary symptoms or antibiotic change due to persistent or worsening urinary symptoms and secondary outcomes included treatment failure at 28 and 90 days, as well as adverse drug reactions.
Results
Among 415 patients, 210 received cefpodoxime and 205 received cefdinir. Fourteen-day treatment failure was similar between groups (4.3% vs 4.4%; p=1.000), with no significant differences at 28 days (2.9% vs 3.9%; p=0.597) or 90 days (6.2% vs 10.2%; p=0.154). Cefpodoxime patients had more SIRS ≥2 (22.4% vs 14.6%; p=0.042), complicated UTI (42.9% vs 30.7%; p=0.010), and ED ceftriaxone administration (63.8% vs 52.2%; p=0.017).
Conclusion
Cefpodoxime and cefdinir demonstrated similar return-to-care outcomes after ED discharge for UTI, with no statistically significant differences in treatment failure at 14, 28, or 90 days. Despite greater baseline illness severity in the cefpodoxime group, outcomes remained comparable to cefdinir, suggesting cefpodoxime may be a reasonable oral option for ED UTI discharge. Additional studies with larger sample sizes are needed to better define its role in higher-risk UTI populations.
Self-Assessment Question
Based on the findings of this study, what conclusions can be drawn regarding cefpodoxime compared to cefdinir in ED patients with UTIs? (Select all that apply)
a) Comparable treatment failure at 14 days
b) Superior short-term efficacy of cefdinir
c) Potential differences in longer-term outcomes
d) Increased adverse drug reactions with cefpodoxime
Answer: A, C
Moderators
SY

Sylvia Yeager

PACT Clinical Pharmacy Practitioner, JEVZ VAMC
Presenters
avatar for Nadine Haidar

Nadine Haidar

Medstar Washington Hospital Center PGY1 Resident
Evaluators
avatar for Steve Dolley

Steve Dolley

Clinical Pharmacist/Manager, Residency Program Director, Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital
Board certified clinical pharmacist/manager at a 320 inpatient psychiatric facility. Residency Program Director.
Friday May 15, 2026 11:40am - 12:00pm EDT
Room 7

12:00pm EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Room 1

12:00pm EDT

UNFILLED SLOT
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT

Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Room 2

12:00pm EDT

Evaluating pharmacist impact on clinical outcomes in chronic care management - Justin Chan
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Title: Evaluating pharmacist impact on clinical outcomes in chronic care management  
Author: Justin Chan, PharmD; Kimberly Dowdell, MD, FACP; Morgan Lockhart, PharmD, BCACP 
Learning Objective: At the conclusion of my presentation, the participant will be able to describe how the involvement of a pharmacist in chronic care management can influence diabetes-related clinical and financial outcomes.  
Self-Assessment Question: Pharmacist and nurse involvement in the chronic care management (CCM) program increase revenue compared to those not enrolled in the CCM program. (True/False)
Background: No studies have directly compared clinical outcomes among patients seen by nurse care coordinators, patients seen by nurse care coordinators and pharmacists, and those not enrolled in chronic care management (CCM). 
Methods: This is a single-center, retrospective, cohort study. Patients included were adults 65 years and older, enrolled in Medicare, with a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes mellitus who received care at the University Physicians of Charlottesville from January 1, 2024- June 30, 2025. Patients had at least two recorded hemoglobin A1c values (baseline and follow-up) and followed for a minimum of 6 months. Primary endpoint is the proportion of patients achieving a target A1c goal of <8% among those managed by a pharmacist and nurse care coordinators, compared with patients managed by nurse care coordinators alone, and those not enrolled in the CCM program. Secondary endpoints include meeting individualized A1c goals, mean A1c change, completion of eye exams, foot exams, urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio screening (UACR), ratio of reimbursed to billed revenue, and mean net revenue generated per month. Fisher’s exact test, Kruskal-Wallis tests, and descriptive statistics were used where appropriate. 
Results: There were 24 patients in the non-CCM group, 5 patients in the nurse-care coordinators group, and 4 patients seen by nurse-care coordinators and a pharmacist. A1c <8% was achieved in 75% (3/4) of patients in the nurses and pharmacist group compared to 42% (10/24) and 40% (2/5) in the non-CCM group and nurses' only group respectively; target A1c was achieved in 50% (2/4) vs 25% (6/24) and 20% (1/5), respectively. Patients in the pharmacist and nurses’ group had the greatest mean A1c reduction (2.15%) and the highest rates of annual diabetic preventable screenings completed except for UACR. Mean net revenue generated was $155.48 per month in patients seen by nurses only compared to $191.48 per month in those seen by nurses and a pharmacist.  
Conclusion: These results suggest pharmacist involvement may improve clinical outcomes and increase revenue. Lack of statistical significance from the results is likely due to small sample size and limited power. Larger prospective studies are needed to confirm these findings. Future studies should assess patients transitioning from pharmacist to nurse-only care and could include additional endpoints such as BMI changes and statin use.
Moderators Presenters
avatar for Justin Chan

Justin Chan

Community-Based PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, UVA Health
Justin is a community-based PGY1 pharmacy resident at UVA Health in Charlottesville, VA. He is originally from Queens, NY and completed pharmacy school at St. John's University. Next year, he will join the workforce.
Evaluators
avatar for Vi Nguyen

Vi Nguyen

Clinical Pharmacist II, IMVH hospital
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Room 6

12:00pm EDT

Evaluation of Lorazepam Dosing on Status Epilepticus Treatment and Outcomes
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Authors
Victoria Yeung, PharmD; William Smith, PharmD; Kaden Shen, PharmD, BCEMP; Felicia Wang, PharmD, BCCCP; Karlie Knobloch, PharmD, BCEMP; Melanie Goodberlet, PharmD, BCPS, BCCCP

Learning Objective
Summarize the safety and treatment-escalation outcomes associated with reduced-dose lorazepam in adult patients with status epilepticus (SE) at an academic medical center.

Background
Guideline recommended dosing of intravenous (IV) lorazepam for SE is 0.1 mg/kg (max 4 mg). A reduced dose of 2 mg is sometimes used to mitigate safety concerns. The objective was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of reduced dose lorazepam for SE management. 

Methods
This single-center, retrospective analysis was conducted at a tertiary academic medical center. Adult patients were included if they were diagnosed with SE and treated with at least one dose of IV lorazepam during admission between January 2020 to March 2025. Patients were excluded for pregnancy, IV access issues, unclear seizure diagnosis, or seizing out of the hospital. The primary outcome was the percentage of patients that required more than one dose of lorazepam for SE within 20 minutes. Secondary outcomes included the percentage of patients who required second- or third-line agents, total lorazepam doses within 40 minutes of initial treatment, time between first and second dose, and rates of adverse events associated with uncontrolled SE, including incidence of intubation, aspiration events, or cardiac arrhythmias, within 24 hours of initial lorazepam dose. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze baseline characteristics and outcomes.

Results
Of 287 patients identified, 80 and 6 patients were included in the 2 mg and 4 mg groups, respectively. The primary outcome was observed in 10 (12.5%) in the 2 mg group and 3 (50%) in the 4 mg group. 32.5% in the 2 mg and 66.7% in the 4 mg group required additional agents. The median number of lorazepam doses within 40 minutes of initial dose was 1 in the 2 mg group and 1.5 in the 4 mg group. If initial dose failed, time between first and second doses of lorazepam was 7.5 minutes in the 2 mg group and 4.7 minutes in the 4 mg group. Rates of intubation, aspiration events, and cardiac arrhythmias were 13.8%, 11.3%, and 0% in the 2 mg group and 33.3%, 0%, and 0% in the 4 mg group, respectively.

Conclusions
This study characterizes the institutional prescribing patterns and assesses the efficacy and safety of reduced dose lorazepam for the initial management of SE at an academic medical center.

Self-Assessment Question
True or False – Patients in the 2 mg group required more lorazepam doses in the first 40 minutes compared to those in the 4 mg group.
Moderators Presenters
VY

Victoria Yeung

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Evaluators
avatar for Ryan Whisler

Ryan Whisler

Clinical Coordinator, Health Outcomes and Research, Johns Hopkins Care at Home

Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Room 5

12:00pm EDT

Comparing the Efficacy and Safety of Split versus Front Loading Dosing Strategies of Phenobarbital in Hospitalized Patients with Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Title: Comparing the Efficacy and Safety of Split versus Front Loading Dosing Strategies of Phenobarbital in Hospitalized Patients with Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome
 
Authors: Jillian Johnson, PharmD; Jina Patel, PharmD, BCCCP, Peter P. Olivieri, MD, FCCP; Hyunuk Seung, MS
 
Learning Objective: At the conclusion of this presentation, the participant will be able to describe the differences in efficacy and safety outcomes between front loading and split loading dosing strategies of phenobarbital in alcohol withdrawal syndrome.
 
Background/Objective: The objective of this study is to compare efficacy and safety outcomes of front versus split loading doses of phenobarbital in patients with alcohol withdrawal syndrome to add to the limited available evidence.  

Methods: This is a retrospective chart review of patients hospitalized for the management of alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS) at Baltimore Washington Medical Center between May 2024-March 2026 and treated with phenobarbital. The primary objective of this study is to quantify the difference in benzodiazepine requirements during hospital stay in patients with AWS who are treated with a front or split loading dose of phenobarbital. The secondary objective is to quantify the difference in average Modified Minnesota Detoxification Scale (mMINDS) scores 24 hours after loading dose administration, length of intermediate care/intensive care unit stay, length of hospital stay, use of adjunctive agents (midazolam, dexmedetomidine, and/or propofol), and safety outcomes (need for supplemental oxygen, days requiring mechanical ventilation, occurrence of seizures). Participants were excluded if they had been admitted more than 48 hours prior to phenobarbital administration, received a midazolam infusion, propofol, or dexmedetomidine prior to phenobarbital, or were transferred from another hospital center.
 
Results: The split loading group had significantly higher total benzodiazepine requirements compared to the front loading group (44 vs 18 mg lorazepam equivalents; p=0.0017). There was no statistically significant difference in change in mMINDS scores between groups, but the front loading group had lower average 24 hour mMINDS scores post phenobarbital loading dose compared to the split loading group (4.6 vs 5.8; p=0.049). The split loading group had significantly longer ICU length of stay (3 vs 0 days; p=0.001) and hospital length of stay (5.5 vs 3 days; p=0.0048). There were no statistically significant differences adjunctive therapy requirements or safety outcomes.

Conclusions: The front loading dosing scheme of phenobarbital is associated with statistically significant lower benzodiazepine requirements, lower length of ICU stay, lower length of hospital stay, and lower 24 hour average mMINDS scores. Safety outcomes were similar among both groups. This suggests that front loading doses of phenobarbital may provide better control of symptoms of alcohol withdrawal while maintaining a similar safety profile to split loading doses.

Self-Assessment Question: True/False: Patients who received front loading doses of phenobarbital had significantly lower benzodiazepine requirements with no significant difference in ventilation duration compared to split loading doses

Moderators
SY

Sylvia Yeager

PACT Clinical Pharmacy Practitioner, JEVZ VAMC
Presenters
avatar for Jillian Johnson

Jillian Johnson

PGY1 Pharmacy Resident, University of Maryland Baltimore Washington Medical Center
Evaluators
avatar for Steve Dolley

Steve Dolley

Clinical Pharmacist/Manager, Residency Program Director, Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital
Board certified clinical pharmacist/manager at a 320 inpatient psychiatric facility. Residency Program Director.
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Room 7

12:00pm EDT

Correlating application screening rubric categories with interview invitations at a postgraduate year 1 (PGY1) residency program - Paige Spencer
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Title: Correlating application screening rubric categories with interview invitations at a postgraduate year 1 (PGY1) residency program
Authors: Paige Spencer, PharmD, Gail M. Sanchez, PharmD, BCPS, DPLA and Xia Thai, PharmD, BCPS; Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA), Cambridge, MA.
Objective: At the conclusion of the presentation, audience members will be able to state the process used to evaluate an application screening rubric for a PGY1 residency program.
Self Assessment Question: What is the importance of evaluating an application screening rubric for PGY1 residency programs discussed today?
Background: Identify which screening rubric categories are significant predictors of PGY1 interview offers.
Methods: This retrospective quality improvement project evaluates the scoring of PGY1 residency applications utilizing our institution’s ten category weighted rubric. Completed applications received through the online centralized application service by the cycle deadline of the Phase 1 Match from 2017-2024 are included and de-identified using a random number generator. The candidates invited for an interview serve as the test group and those not invited serve as the control group. A logistic regression analysis will be performed. The primary outcome will be the correlation of each individual rubric category score and whether or not the candidate was offered an interview. Secondary outcomes will include the correlation between interview invitation and the practice area of the reviewer and the pharmacy school location. We hypothesize the correlation analysis will determine how to best modify the screening rubric to improve efficiency while still offering interviews to highly qualified candidates.
Results: Our program received 441 completed applications from 2017 to 2024. We excluded 12 applications due to incorrect documentation of screening scores leaving 429 applications included in the final analysis. Of the 429 applicants, 209 (49%) received an interview offer. In the final multivariate logistic regression, the overall impression variable was excluded to address multicollinearity, while publications and other skills were removed due to a lack of statistical significance. The resulting model demonstrated a robust fit (McFadden’s R2= 0.32, p<0.001), identifying seven rubric categories as significant predictors of interview offers: grades, leadership, letter of intent, letter of recommendation, presentations, rotations, and work experience.
Conclusion: Based on our results and the relative importance of each category to our institution, the authors plan to modify the screening rubric for future PGY1 recruitment cycles. These changes aim to improve efficiency while continuing to identify highly qualified candidates.
Moderators
avatar for Alyssia McCauley

Alyssia McCauley

PGY-1 Residency Program Director | Transitions of Care Pharmacist, Lifebridge Health
Presenters
avatar for Paige Spencer

Paige Spencer

PGY 1 Pharmacy Resident
I am Paige Spencer, PharmD and I am a PGY1 Pharmacy Resident at Cambridge Health Alliance in Cambridge, Massachusetts. I completed pharmacy school and obtained my PharmD from the University of Toledo in Toledo, Ohio before moving to Massachusetts for residency. Next year, I will be... Read More →
Evaluators
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Room 3

12:00pm EDT

Evaluating the impact on antibiotic discontinuation pre- and post- implementation of a modified urinalysis reflex to culture (UARC) criteria
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Authors: Maksudul Mowla, PharmD, Clint Borja, PharmD, BCIDP, Nicole Harrington, PharmD, BCIDP, BCPS-AQ ID, Jennifer Wolf, PharmD, BCIDP

Objective: Audience members will be able to describe the impact of stricter UARC criteria on discontinuation of antibiotics for urinary tract infection (UTI).

Background: The UARC criteria at ChristianaCare were modified to only reflex to culture if white blood cells >10 cells/hpf are present. An internal study showed a 15.2% reduction in urine cultures performed after implementation of the modified criteria.

Methods: This single-center retrospective study is an extension of the previous internal study to evaluate the impact of the modified UARC criteria on antibiotic discontinuation. Patients from the internal study who are ≥ 18 years old with an UARC performed, and an antibiotic ordered within 24 hours of an UARC order were included. Key exclusion criteria include pregnancy, transplant patients, an absolute neutrophil count of < 1000 cells/mm3, and patients receiving antibiotics for another indication.
The primary outcome is the percentage of patients with antibiotics discontinued within 24 hours of an UARC result. Key secondary outcomes include the percentage of antibiotic discontinuation within 48 hours of an UARC result, and within 24 hours of a negative urine culture.
A Chi-square test was performed to compare the primary and secondary outcomes.

Results: A randomized sample of 950 patients from the internal study was evaluated. Of these, 75 patients in the pre-cohort and 78 in the post-cohort met inclusion criteria.
The percentage of patients with antibiotics discontinued within 24 hours of an UARC result was 20% vs 23% (p = 0.64) in the pre- and post-cohort, respectively. At 48 hours, antibiotic discontinuation was 44% vs 50% (p = 0.46) between the two groups. In patients whose UARC did reflex to culture, antibiotics were discontinued within 24 hours of a negative urine culture in 67% vs 68% (p = 0.91) of patients. Stand-alone urine cultures were ordered despite a negative UARC for 2 patients in the pre-cohort and 6 in the post-cohort.

Conclusion: There was no statistical difference in the percentage of antibiotic discontinuation, though it was slightly higher in the post group (3% at 24 hours and 6% at 48 hours). These findings maybe impacted by study limitations including a small sample size and possible randomization bias. Antimicrobial stewardship principles do highlight the potential benefit of a more stringent UARC criteria, and the need for a robust analysis that includes evaluation of clinical rationale for antibiotic prescribing.

Self Assessment Question: Does the implementation of a more stringent UARC criteria always result in antibiotic discontinuation for UTI?
  • True
  • False
Moderators
avatar for Carolyn Orendorff

Carolyn Orendorff

System Director of Clinical Pharmacy Services, ChristianaCare
Attended University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. Completed PGY1-PGY2 Pharmacotherapy Residency at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Currently works as Director of Clinical Pharmacy at ChristianaCare. 
Presenters Evaluators
CF

Charisa Flaherty

RPD, Winchester Medical Center
Friday May 15, 2026 12:00pm - 12:20pm EDT
Room 4
 


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