Prolonged QT Syndrome
A nursing-focused guide to recognising, monitoring, and safely managing acquired and congenital QT prolongation — including drug-induced causes, Torsades de Pointes prevention, and electrolyte management — for pre-licensure nursing students.
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Mechanism / Pathophysiology
Mechanism / Pathophysiology
The QT Interval and Cardiac Repolarization
The QT interval on a standard 12-lead ECG represents the total duration of ventricular depolarization (QRS complex) and repolarization (T wave). In practical terms, it measures how long the ventricular myocardium takes to electrically reset after each contraction. The interval is measured from the beginning of the Q wave to the end of the T wave and is reported in milliseconds (ms).
Because the QT interval shortens at faster heart rates and lengthens at slower rates, the clinically useful measurement is the corrected QT interval (QTc), which adjusts for heart rate. The most widely used correction formula is Bazett's formula: QTc = QT ÷ √RR (where RR is in seconds). QTc values greater than 440–460 ms in males or 460–470 ms in females are considered prolonged; values greater than 500 ms in any patient represent a critical threshold associated with markedly increased arrhythmia risk.
Phases of the Cardiac Action Potential
Prolongation of the QT interval reflects delayed repolarization of ventricular myocytes. During a normal action potential, Phase 3 repolarization is driven primarily by outward potassium currents — specifically the rapid delayed rectifier potassium current (IKr), encoded by the HERG gene. Any factor that reduces this outward current (drug blockade, gene mutation, electrolyte deficiency) slows repolarization and lengthens the QT interval.
During prolonged repolarization, the ventricular myocardium is in a vulnerable state. If a premature ventricular depolarization occurs during this window — the so-called R-on-T phenomenon — it can trigger Torsades de Pointes (TdP), a polymorphic ventricular tachycardia in which the QRS complexes appear to twist around the isoelectric baseline. TdP may self-terminate but can degenerate into ventricular fibrillation and sudden cardiac death.
Congenital vs. Acquired Long QT Syndrome
Congenital Long QT Syndrome (LQTS) is a genetic ion-channel disorder. The most clinically important subtypes are:
- LQT1 (KCNQ1 gene mutation — reduced IKs current): triggered by exercise, particularly swimming; beta-blockers are highly effective
- LQT2 (HERG/KCNH2 gene mutation — reduced IKr current): triggered by sudden auditory stimuli (alarm clocks, phone calls); avoid QT-prolonging drugs entirely
- LQT3 (SCN5A gene mutation — increased late sodium current): events more likely at rest or during sleep; mexiletine may have a role
Acquired (drug-induced) QT prolongation is far more common clinically and is the primary concern in hospital nursing practice. The mechanism in nearly all cases is blockade of the IKr potassium channel by the offending drug. Risk is amplified — often multiplicatively — by concurrent electrolyte deficiencies and multiple QT-prolonging agents.
Assessment & Monitoring
Baseline Assessment Before Initiating QT-Prolonging Therapy
Before starting any medication with known QT-prolonging potential, the nurse's priority assessments are:
- 12-lead ECG: Obtain and document the baseline QTc. This is the reference point for all subsequent monitoring. Note heart rate, PR interval, QRS duration, and the morphology of the T wave (flattening or bifid T waves suggest electrolyte disturbance).
- Electrolyte panel: Serum potassium (K⁺), magnesium (Mg²⁺), and calcium (Ca²⁺) must all be within normal limits before initiation. Hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, and hypocalcemia each independently prolong the QT interval and amplify drug-induced effects.
- Medication reconciliation: Identify all current medications — prescription, OTC, and herbal — and cross-reference with QT-risk databases (e.g., CredibleMeds.org). Flag combinations of QT-prolonging agents for provider review.
- Cardiac history: Prior arrhythmia history, syncopal episodes (especially with exercise, fright, or sudden noise), family history of sudden cardiac death or unexplained drowning may suggest underlying congenital LQTS.
- Renal and hepatic function: Many QT-prolonging drugs are renally or hepatically cleared; impaired clearance increases drug exposure and QT risk.
Ongoing QTc Monitoring Parameters
| QTc Value | Clinical Significance | Nursing Action |
|---|---|---|
| < 440 ms (M) / < 460 ms (F) | Normal | Continue current monitoring protocol |
| 440–460 ms (M) / 460–470 ms (F) | Borderline | Increase monitoring frequency; review additive risk factors |
| > 460 ms (M) / > 470 ms (F) | Prolonged | Notify provider; consider dose reduction or agent substitution |
| > 500 ms (any sex) | Critical threshold | Hold offending agent; urgent provider notification; continuous telemetry |
| Increase > 60 ms from baseline | Significant change | Notify provider regardless of absolute value |
Telemetry and Rhythm Monitoring
Patients on QT-prolonging medications, especially in the inpatient setting, should be placed on continuous cardiac telemetry or at minimum undergo serial ECGs (before each dose during initiation, then daily). The nurse monitors for:
- QTc trending upward across serial measurements
- Premature ventricular contractions (PVCs), particularly if they fall on the T wave (R-on-T)
- T-wave morphology changes: flattening, inversion, notching, or a bifid (two-humped) T wave are early warning signs of repolarization abnormality
- Onset of Torsades de Pointes: the characteristic pattern of QRS complexes with continuously shifting axis on the rhythm strip — the "twisting of the points"
Symptoms Requiring Immediate Assessment
Patients should be asked about and assessed for:
- Palpitations or a sensation of the heart "fluttering" or "skipping"
- Pre-syncope or syncope — especially exertional syncope or syncope precipitated by a sudden loud noise (a red flag for LQT2)
- Dizziness or lightheadedness
- Chest pain or pressure
- In severe cases, collapse or loss of consciousness
Any of these symptoms in a patient receiving QT-prolonging therapy should prompt immediate ECG acquisition and provider notification.
Nursing Interventions
Priority Interventions for QT Prolongation
When QT prolongation is identified or suspected, nursing interventions follow a clear priority sequence:
1. Ensure patient safety
- Place the patient on continuous cardiac monitoring (telemetry or bedside monitor) if not already ordered
- Ensure a crash cart and defibrillator are immediately accessible and checked within the past shift
- Position the patient in a semi-Fowler's or supine position for ECG acquisition and monitoring comfort
2. Obtain a 12-lead ECG
- Acquire immediately when a critical QTc is noted on telemetry or when the patient reports palpitations, dizziness, or syncope
- Compare to baseline; calculate the change from prior QTc values
3. Notify the provider Use SBAR when escalating:
S — [Patient name] in Room [X] has a QTc of [X] ms on today's ECG — an increase of [X] ms
from yesterday's baseline of [X] ms.
B — [Age]-year-old [sex] admitted for [diagnosis], currently receiving [QT-prolonging
drug(s)]. Relevant electrolytes from this morning: K⁺ [X], Mg²⁺ [X], Ca²⁺ [X].
[Additional risk factors: renal impairment / concurrent QT drugs / electrolyte deficiency].
A — The patient [is/is not] symptomatic. [Describe any palpitations, dizziness, syncope,
or rhythm changes on telemetry]. I am holding the [medication] pending your guidance.
R — Requesting orders to: hold or reduce [medication] / correct electrolytes / obtain
cardiology consult / increase monitoring frequency.
4. Hold the offending medication
- Hold any QT-prolonging drug when the QTc exceeds 500 ms or increases > 60 ms from baseline — this is a standard safety hold parameter that does not require a specific order in most facilities; the nurse should notify the provider and document the hold with rationale.
5. Correct electrolyte deficiencies
- Hypokalemia: Administer IV or oral potassium as ordered. IV potassium must never be administered as a rapid bolus — the standard safe rate is ≤ 10–20 mEq/hour via peripheral IV (maximum 40 mEq/hour via central line with continuous monitoring). Recheck K⁺ after each replacement dose.
- Hypomagnesemia: IV magnesium sulfate is both a corrective measure and the first-line treatment for active TdP (1–2 g IV over 5–15 minutes for TdP; slower infusion for asymptomatic deficiency). Magnesium must be given cautiously in renal impairment — monitor deep tendon reflexes.
- Hypocalcemia: Administer calcium gluconate or calcium chloride as ordered; calcium chloride contains three times the elemental calcium and is generally reserved for emergent use.
Management of Torsades de Pointes
Torsades de Pointes is a life-threatening emergency requiring immediate action:
- If hemodynamically unstable (pulseless or loss of consciousness): Initiate cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and call a rapid response or code. Prepare for immediate unsynchronized defibrillation (defibrillation, not cardioversion, because TdP is not a regular rhythm). Follow ACLS protocols.
- If hemodynamically stable: Administer IV magnesium sulfate 1–2 g over 5–15 minutes as ordered — this is the pharmacologic treatment of choice for TdP regardless of serum magnesium level.
- Discontinue all QT-prolonging agents immediately; notify the provider and pharmacist.
- Correct electrolytes aggressively: target K⁺ ≥ 4.0 mEq/L and Mg²⁺ ≥ 2.0 mg/dL in patients with TdP.
- Temporary overdrive pacing (via external or transvenous pacemaker) shortens the QT interval by increasing heart rate and may be used to suppress recurrent TdP — anticipate this intervention if TdP recurs.
- Isoproterenol infusion (a beta-agonist that increases heart rate) may be ordered as a bridge to pacing in bradycardia-dependent TdP.
Medication Considerations
High-Risk QT-Prolonging Medications
The following drug classes and agents carry the highest clinical risk for QT prolongation and TdP. Nurses must know the monitoring requirements for each class.
Antiarrhythmics (Highest Risk)
Class IA and Class III antiarrhythmics intentionally prolong the QT interval as part of their mechanism of action — making them both therapeutic and inherently proarrhythmic.
- Amiodarone (Class III): Despite having one of the longest QT-prolonging effects, its unique pharmacokinetics (extremely long half-life of 40–55 days, large volume of distribution) paradoxically make TdP relatively rare compared to other Class III agents. However, pulmonary, thyroid, and hepatic toxicity require separate monitoring. QTc should be checked periodically.
- Sotalol (Class III/II): Proarrhythmia risk (TdP) is dose-dependent and reverse use-dependent — risk is highest at slow heart rates. Requires in-hospital initiation with serial QTc checks before each dose increase (REMS program). Hold if QTc > 500 ms. Renally cleared — dose adjustment mandatory.
- Quinidine (Class IA): Prototype Class IA agent. IKr blockade + sodium channel blockade + vagolytic effect. Paradoxic acceleration of ventricular rate in AF is possible. Monitor for cinchonism (tinnitus, headache, visual changes). Beers Criteria drug in older adults.
- Dofetilide (Class III): Selective IKr blocker with a strict REMS program requiring minimum 3-day hospital stay for ECG monitoring during initiation. QTc must be measured 2–3 hours after each dose during the initiation phase; dose reduction is mandatory if QTc rises > 15% or exceeds 500 ms. Renal dosing is mandatory.
Antipsychotics
All antipsychotics carry some degree of QT risk via IKr blockade. Risk is greatest with:
- Haloperidol (especially IV administration at high doses — a common inpatient scenario for delirium management): obtain baseline QTc; avoid IV doses if QTc > 500 ms; use oral or IM route when feasible.
- Thioridazine: Highest QT risk among all antipsychotics; reserved as last-resort agent only; pigmentary retinopathy is an additional serious adverse effect.
- Ziprasidone, quetiapine: Moderate QT risk; avoid concurrent QT-prolonging agents.
Antibiotics
- Azithromycin: Popular macrolide antibiotic with underappreciated QT risk; IV administration carries greater risk than oral. The FDA issued a safety communication in 2013 highlighting potentially fatal arrhythmias. Risk compounds dramatically with concurrent QT drugs.
- Fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, moxifloxacin): Class-wide QT effect; moxifloxacin has the greatest risk. Avoid in patients with known LQTS or on concurrent QT-prolonging drugs.
Antiemetics
- Ondansetron: The 32 mg single-dose IV formulation was withdrawn due to QT concerns; current maximum single IV dose is 16 mg. Administer IV over at least 15 minutes (not as a rapid bolus). Use with caution in hepatic impairment. Dose reduction in elderly.
- Droperidol: High QT risk (black box warning); requires baseline ECG and QTc monitoring. Reserved for refractory nausea/vomiting when safer alternatives have failed.
Opioids
- Methadone: Among the most significant QT-prolonging opioids. Risk increases with dose escalation and with concomitant CYP3A4 inhibitors (which increase methadone exposure). ECG monitoring is recommended at initiation, dose changes, and periodically thereafter. Patients should avoid other QT-prolonging drugs.
Nursing Hold Parameters (General)
Regardless of specific agent, the following parameters should prompt the nurse to hold the medication and notify the provider before the next dose:
- QTc > 500 ms on any ECG
- Increase in QTc > 60 ms from the patient's baseline
- New onset of palpitations, dizziness, syncope, or presyncope
- Serum K⁺ < 3.0 mEq/L or Mg²⁺ < 1.5 mg/dL (uncorrected)
Patient Education
Teaching Patients With QT Prolongation
Patient and family education is a critical nursing intervention because many episodes of TdP and sudden cardiac death in patients with acquired or congenital LQTS occur outside of monitored settings. Education must be delivered when the patient is physiologically stable, not during an acute arrhythmic event.
Key Teaching Points
1. Understanding the condition
- Explain that QT prolongation means the heart's electrical "reset" after each beat takes longer than normal, creating a window during which a dangerous rhythm can start.
- Emphasise that the condition is often asymptomatic until it is not — the first symptom can be a collapse or cardiac arrest, which makes prevention and monitoring essential.
2. Medication awareness
- Teach the patient to carry a list of all QT-prolonging medications they are currently taking.
- Instruct the patient to inform every healthcare provider (including dentists, urgent care clinicians, and pharmacists) about their QT risk before any new medication is prescribed.
- Advise the patient to check new medications — including over-the-counter drugs — against CredibleMeds.org before taking them.
- Common OTC medications to avoid: diphenhydramine (Benadryl), some antifungal treatments, and some antihistamines.
- Never abruptly stop or double-dose antiarrhythmic medications — changes to dosing should only occur under provider guidance.
3. Electrolyte management
- Instruct patients receiving diuretics to eat potassium-rich foods (bananas, oranges, leafy greens, potatoes) and to report muscle cramps, weakness, or palpitations — all potential signs of hypokalemia.
- Teach patients to report vomiting, diarrhea, or poor oral intake promptly, as these conditions deplete electrolytes rapidly.
- Explain that scheduled blood tests (electrolyte panels) are a safety measure, not optional.
4. Symptom recognition — when to seek emergency care immediately
- Call 911 (or have someone call) if: sudden loss of consciousness, collapse, inability to be roused, or if someone witnesses a seizure-like episode (which may represent TdP with cerebral hypoperfusion).
- Go to the ED or call the provider the same day if: new or worsening palpitations, dizziness, pre-syncope (nearly blacking out), or chest pain.
5. Lifestyle and activity guidance (congenital LQTS)
- LQT1 patients: Avoid competitive swimming and vigorous aquatic exercise. Beta-blockers should be taken consistently; do not skip doses.
- LQT2 patients: Minimise sudden loud auditory stimuli where possible — use vibration alarms instead of auditory alarms; be aware of the trigger risk from sudden phone or doorbell sounds.
- All LQTS patients: Avoid stimulant drugs including cocaine, amphetamines, and high-dose caffeine. Inform coaches or athletic trainers of the diagnosis.
6. Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) education (if applicable)
- If an ICD has been placed, teach the patient about activity restrictions during the healing period, signs of infection at the implant site, what to expect if the device fires, and the importance of keeping the device ID card with them at all times.
Safety Considerations
High-Alert Medication Safety
The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) identifies several QT-prolonging drugs on its high-alert medication lists, including methadone, amiodarone, sotalol, and dofetilide. High-alert medications require additional safeguards:
- Independent double-check before administration (per facility policy)
- Dedicated IV lines for certain agents (amiodarone requires a dedicated line or port due to incompatibilities and potential for precipitate)
- Weight-based dosing verification where applicable
- Pharmacist review of all orders involving ISMP high-alert QT-prolonging drugs
Intravenous Administration Safety
IV formulations carry significantly higher QT risk than oral equivalents for several agents:
- IV haloperidol: Higher QT risk than oral; avoid in patients with known QTc > 500 ms. In hospital delirium protocols, the lowest effective dose via the safest route should be used.
- IV ondansetron: Maximum single dose 16 mg; administer over at least 15 minutes — never as a rapid IV push. Reduce dose in hepatic impairment.
- IV amiodarone: Must be administered via large peripheral vein or central line (causes phlebitis in small veins). Use glass or polyolefin containers; PVC tubing causes drug absorption.
- IV magnesium sulfate: Administer at the ordered rate only — too-rapid administration causes hypotension, respiratory depression, and cardiac arrest. Have calcium gluconate at bedside as the antidote for magnesium toxicity.
Look-Alike / Sound-Alike Risks
- Quinidine vs. quinine: Quinine is an antimalarial with some QT risk; quinidine is an antiarrhythmic. The names are easily confused on handwritten orders — verify with the prescriber or pharmacist.
- Sotalol vs. atenolol: Both are beta-blockers but sotalol has additional Class III antiarrhythmic activity and substantially greater QT risk. Confirm drug name carefully.
Environmental Safety
- Patients with active QT prolongation or recent TdP should not be left unmonitored.
- Crash cart and defibrillator should be checked at the beginning of every shift on any unit where QT-prolonging medications are administered.
- For patients with congenital LQTS who are inpatients, consider auditory environment minimisation (reducing alarm volume, using vibration call systems) especially in LQT2.
Documentation
What to Chart for QT Prolongation Monitoring
Accurate and timely documentation is both a patient safety requirement and a medicolegal responsibility. For patients receiving QT-prolonging therapy, the following must be documented:
Per-Dose Documentation (Medications with Active QTc Monitoring Requirements)
- QTc value measured prior to administration (or within the window specified by facility policy/REMS requirements)
- Time and route of medication administration
- Electrolyte values most recently available (K⁺, Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺) and whether any deficiencies were corrected prior to dosing
- Rhythm at time of administration (e.g., "sinus rhythm, rate 68, QTc 448 ms per 12-lead ECG at 0730 — ondansetron 8 mg IV administered over 15 min at 0740; patient tolerated without complaint")
- Any dose held with clinical rationale and provider notification documented (time, name of provider, orders received)
ECG Documentation
- Document acquisition time, lead placement, and QTc value for every ECG obtained
- Note any morphologic changes: T-wave flattening, bifid T waves, U waves, PVCs
- Compare to previous ECG and document the delta (change from prior QTc)
Incident / Emergency Documentation
If TdP or a sustained arrhythmia occurs:
- Document the time of rhythm recognition, patient presentation (consciousness, pulse, BP), and exact interventions performed in chronological order
- Document all medications administered (IV magnesium dose, time, rate; any ACLS drugs)
- Document provider notification times, orders received, and response
- Complete a variance/incident report per facility policy — this is separate from the clinical note and is a quality improvement tool, not punitive documentation
SBAR for QTc Escalation
S — [Patient name], Room [X]: QTc is now [X] ms — increased [X] ms from
yesterday's baseline of [X] ms. Currently receiving [drug name].
B — [Age/sex], admitted [date] for [diagnosis]. Relevant history:
[electrolyte status, renal function, concurrent QT drugs].
A — Patient [is/is not] symptomatic. Most recent K⁺ [X] mEq/L, Mg²⁺ [X] mg/dL.
I am holding the [drug] pending your guidance.
R — Requesting orders to: reduce dose / substitute agent / obtain cardiology
consult / add electrolyte replacement orders.
Special Populations
Geriatric Patients
Older adults are at substantially elevated risk for drug-induced QT prolongation for several intersecting reasons:
- Polypharmacy: The average older adult takes 5–10 medications. The probability of having at least one QT-prolonging agent increases linearly with the number of drugs prescribed, and combinations are far more dangerous than single agents.
- Pharmacokinetic changes: Decreased renal and hepatic clearance increases plasma concentrations of renally and hepatically cleared QT-prolonging drugs. Body composition changes increase the volume of distribution of lipophilic drugs (e.g., amiodarone).
- Electrolyte vulnerability: Poor nutritional intake, diuretic use, and the reduced efficiency of renal electrolyte conservation increase susceptibility to hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia.
- Autonomic changes: Age-related reduction in autonomic responsiveness limits compensatory mechanisms when arrhythmias begin.
- Beers Criteria: The American Geriatrics Society Beers Criteria specifically flags several QT-prolonging drugs as potentially inappropriate in older adults, including quinidine, droperidol, and certain antipsychotics. Nurses should be familiar with this resource when reviewing medication orders in older patients.
Paediatric Patients
- QTc threshold values differ in children; consult age-specific references. Values > 450 ms are generally considered prolonged in children.
- Congenital LQTS most commonly presents in childhood and adolescence — syncope in a young person during exercise or following a sudden fright should always trigger a QTc evaluation.
- Medications used in paediatrics — including erythromycin (for GI motility) and certain antifungals — carry QT risk that is easily overlooked.
- Sudden unexplained death in infancy (SUDI): LQT3 has been implicated in some cases; family screening is warranted when a young person dies suddenly without clear explanation.
Obstetric Patients
- Physiologic changes of pregnancy (increased plasma volume, altered protein binding, faster renal clearance) alter the pharmacokinetics of QT-prolonging drugs.
- Congenital LQTS in pregnancy: The postpartum period — not pregnancy itself — carries the highest risk for cardiac events in women with LQT2. Beta-blockers should be continued throughout pregnancy and the postpartum period and are not contraindicated.
- Many QT-prolonging antiemetics (ondansetron, promethazine) are used in pregnancy; lowest effective dose and shortest duration are recommended.
- Hypomagnesemia is common in preeclampsia/eclampsia, and magnesium sulfate is used therapeutically in this setting — paradoxically, magnesium is both a treatment for TdP and a treatment for preeclampsia, but IV administration requires careful rate control.
Renal Impairment
- Renally cleared QT-prolonging drugs (sotalol, dofetilide, atenolol) accumulate dramatically as GFR falls. Dose reductions are mandatory and are typically protocol-driven (e.g., dofetilide REMS requires CrCl-based dose selection; sotalol dose interval is extended with renal impairment).
- Hyperkalemia (common in renal failure) shortens the QT interval but does not protect against drug-induced QT prolongation — and the concurrent electrolyte instability in renal patients adds complexity.
- Monitor renal function (BUN, creatinine, eGFR/CrCl) regularly in patients on renally cleared QT-prolonging agents.
Evidence-Based Practice
Clinical Guidelines and Evidence Base
CredibleMeds / AZCERT QT Drug Risk Classification
The Arizona CERT (Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics) maintains the CredibleMeds database (crediblemeds.org), which provides the most clinically current and evidence-graded classification of QT-prolonging drugs. The four risk categories are:
- Known Risk: Drugs with substantial evidence of QT prolongation and TdP risk under ordinary use conditions
- Conditional Risk: Drugs associated with TdP only under certain conditions (e.g., high doses, co-administration with interacting drugs, specific patient populations)
- Possible Risk: Drugs with some evidence of QT prolongation but insufficient evidence for TdP
- Special Risk: Drugs associated with TdP only in patients with congenital LQTS
Nurses and pharmacists should reference this database — rather than memory alone — when reviewing medication orders for QT risk.
ACC/AHA Guidance
The American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart Association (AHA) publish guidelines on the management of ventricular arrhythmias and prevention of sudden cardiac death. Key nursing-relevant recommendations include:
- Baseline and serial QTc monitoring is recommended for all patients initiated on Class IA and Class III antiarrhythmics
- Initiation of dofetilide and sotalol requires hospitalisation for continuous ECG monitoring (supported by FDA REMS programs)
- IV magnesium sulfate is the pharmacologic treatment of choice for haemodynamically stable TdP (Class I recommendation)
- Immediate defibrillation for pulseless TdP or TdP degenerating to VF (Class I)
ISMP Medication Safety Alerts
The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) has issued multiple safety alerts relevant to QT prolongation:
- 2013 FDA azithromycin safety communication: risk of potentially fatal cardiac arrhythmias
- ISMP Targeted Medication Safety Best Practices for Hospitals include independent double-checks for methadone and other high-alert QT-prolonging medications
- ISMP warns against rapid IV push administration of ondansetron and other QT-prolonging antiemetics
Nursing Research and Quality Improvement
Evidence supports the following quality measures for reducing harm from drug-induced QT prolongation in hospitalised patients:
- Electronic clinical decision support (CDS) alerts integrated into the EHR for QTc thresholds and QT-drug combinations reduce missed escalations by triggering nursing and provider notification automatically
- Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation at admission, transfer, and discharge identifies QT-drug combinations that may have been missed by prescribers
- Standardised QTc monitoring protocols — including explicit hold parameters and escalation pathways — reduce variation in nursing response and improve outcomes
- Staff education programmes on QT-prolonging drug risks, including simulation-based training on TdP recognition and management, are associated with improved recognition times and intervention accuracy