Topic

Desflurane decommissioned across England

Frances Mortimer
Frances Mortimer • 12 January 2023

Fantastic news today: NHS England is decommissioning desflurane which will no longer be used in NHS hospitals in England from January 2024.

It is wonderful to see decisive action from the health service to protect our climate. Congratulations to all of the members of this network who have contributed to raising awareness about desflurane's environmental harms and the preferability of clinical alternatives, and who have shown in practice that we can do without it!

Here's the statement from the Association of Anaesthetists and the Royal College of Anaesthetists, welcoming the decision: https://anaesthetists.org/Home/News-opinion/News/Joint-statement-on-NHSEs-plan-to-decommission-desflurane-by-early-2024 .

 

Comments (5)

Karina MacLachlan
Karina MacLachlan

Fantastic news! Any practical advice how to dispose of old unopeneded des bottles sitting in pharmacy which the supply company refusing to take back? Or dregs in vaporisers? My colleague tells me it doent burn?

Alifia Chakera
Alifia Chakera

Update to post please read.

Desflurane is being removed from national procurment contract in Scotland from Feb 2023.  We advocate that all Des stock is fully utilised ( but not reordered). Des stock in Scotland can be moved across sites where approriate. Empty bottles are disposed of in normal medicinal waste stream for incineration.

We are having some discussions WRT to full bottles that have expired. 

Options include:

1.  Placed bottles in cytoxic waste stream for higher temperature incineration but this will depend on NHS sites  waste contract this has been suggested as a more appropriate stream.

2 Wait, and hold on to stock until research is concluded regarding the the the byproduct of high temperature.  Given Desflluranes high GWP100 of 2540 we would anticipate that byproduct will have  lower GWP100 but this has not been assured by the manufacturers or any physical chemists to date that I am aware of.

Alifia Chakera, Head of Pharmaceutical Sustainabilty Scot Gov.

 

I will update again

Karina MacLachlan
Karina MacLachlan

Thank you Alifia Chakera so much for this very helpful reply. I will convey to our pharmacy department. 

We stopped using it 2 years ago at my hospital. Sadly we now  have 11 bottles unopened and now out of date. I am really frustrated as we contacted the supply company way back but they  would not receive them back and then we didnt know which was the lesser of the two evils-use it clinically or incinerate them!

Alifia Chakera
Alifia Chakera

We are in discussions with physical chemists at Heriot Watt on the best way to destroy volatile products without producing toxic by products. 
 

High heat incineration is unlikely to be effective. So interim advice is to hold on to expired sealed stock until a full review and recommendation are made available. 

Madhvi Vaghela
Madhvi Vaghela

When it was announced at the WSM last week Greener NHS said there would be more information on what to do with old stocks. I will be looking out for that information too. The medicines lead was also there do tap your pharmacist into this too. 


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