Lucas L M, Colley C A
Division of General Medicine, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland.
West J Med. 1992 Feb;156(2):172-5.
Although physicians in practice are most likely to see patients with adverse drug reactions, they may fail to recognize an adverse effect or to attribute it to a drug effect and, when recognized, they may fail to report serious reactions to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). To recognize and attribute an adverse event to a drug effect, physicians should review the patient's clinical course, looking at patient risk factors, the known adverse reactions to the suspected drug, and the likelihood of a causal relationship between the drug and the adverse event-based on the temporal relationship, response to stopping or restarting the drug, and whether other factors could explain the reaction. Once an adverse drug reaction has been identified, the patient should be informed and appropriate documentation made in the patient's medical record. Serious known reactions and all reactions to newly released drugs or those not previously known to occur (even if the certainty is low) should be reported to the FDA.
尽管临床医生最有可能接触到发生药物不良反应的患者,但他们可能无法识别不良反应或将其归因于药物作用,而且即便识别出来,他们也可能未向美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)报告严重不良反应。为了识别不良反应并将其归因于药物作用,医生应回顾患者的临床病程,考虑患者的风险因素、疑似药物已知的不良反应,以及基于时间关系、停药或重新用药后的反应,还有其他因素能否解释该反应等情况,判断药物与不良反应之间存在因果关系的可能性。一旦确定发生了药物不良反应,就应告知患者,并在患者的病历中进行适当记录。已知的严重不良反应以及所有针对新发布药物或先前未知会发生的反应(即使确定性较低)均应报告给FDA。