Winterstein Almut G, Hatton Randy C, Gonzalez-Rothi Ricardo, Johns Thomas E, Segal Richard
Department of Pharmacy Health Care Administration, College of Pharmacy, University of Florida, P.O. Box 100496, Suite P111, 1600 S.W. Archer Road, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2002 Sep 15;59(18):1742-9. doi: 10.1093/ajhp/59.18.1742.
The ability of a hospital's adverse drug reaction (ADR) database to identify common and repeated patterns of preventable adverse drug events (ADEs) was analyzed. ADR reports collected from 1994 through 2000 were extracted from a teaching hospital's ADR database. Reports were assessed concurrently in accordance with seven previously published explicit criteria for preventability. Only cases considered clinically significant were included in this analysis. Events that occurred in the ambulatory care setting were excluded. Preventable ADEs were categorized by drug or drug class, type of medication error, and the subsequent adverse outcome. Novel in this analysis was the linking of these three descriptors. Of the 2571 ADR reports assessed, 415 ADEs were deemed preventable. Of the preventable ADEs, 98 were not analyzed because they occurred in the ambulatory care setting, leaving 317 preventable ADEs in 275 inpatients (mean age +/- S.D., 48.5 +/- 23.9 years) for analysis. Although 93 drugs were associated with these ADEs, only 10 drugs accounted for more than 60% of the events. Analysis and categorization by type of error and outcome suggested that three high-priority preventable ADEs accounted for 50% of all reports: (1) overdoses of anticoagulants or insufficient monitoring and adjustments (according to laboratory test values) were associated with hemorrhagic events, (2) overdosing or failure to adjust for drug-drug interactions of opiate agonists was associated with somnolence and respiratory depression, and (3) inappropriate dosing or insufficient monitoring of insulins was associated with hypoglycemia. Analysis of a hospital ADR database identified prevalent and preventable clinically significant ADEs.
分析了一家医院的药品不良反应(ADR)数据库识别可预防药品不良事件(ADE)常见及重复模式的能力。从一家教学医院的ADR数据库中提取了1994年至2000年收集的ADR报告。根据之前公布的七条明确的可预防性标准对报告进行同步评估。本分析仅纳入临床意义重大的病例。排除门诊护理环境中发生的事件。可预防的ADE按药物或药物类别、用药错误类型及后续不良后果进行分类。本分析的新颖之处在于将这三个描述因素联系起来。在评估的2571份ADR报告中,415例ADE被认为是可预防的。在可预防的ADE中,98例因发生在门诊护理环境中而未进行分析,剩余275名住院患者(平均年龄±标准差,48.5±23.9岁)中的317例可预防ADE用于分析。虽然93种药物与这些ADE相关,但只有10种药物导致的事件占比超过60%。按错误类型和结果进行的分析表明,三种高优先级可预防ADE占所有报告的50%:(1)抗凝剂过量或监测及调整不足(根据实验室检测值)与出血事件相关,(2)阿片类激动剂用药过量或未针对药物相互作用进行调整与嗜睡和呼吸抑制相关,(3)胰岛素剂量不当或监测不足与低血糖相关。对医院ADR数据库的分析识别出了常见且可预防的具有临床意义的ADE。