Bedouch Pierrick, Charpiat Bruno, Conort Ornella, Rose François-Xavier, Escofier Laurence, Juste Michel, Roubille Renaud, Allenet Benoît
Pôle Pharmacie, Centre Hospitalier-Universitaire de Grenoble & Laboratoire ThEMAS TIMC UMR CNRS 5525, Université Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France.
Ann Pharmacother. 2008 Jul;42(7):1095-103. doi: 10.1345/aph.1L045. Epub 2008 Jun 17.
The development of clinical pharmacy activities in most European countries is underway; however, data on these activities are still poorly reported. Multicenter studies are necessary to standardize and demonstrate the value of clinical pharmacy activities in these countries.
To document clinical pharmacists' daily routine interventions (PIs) to identify trends of intervention, drugs, and situations most frequently associated with drug-related problems (DRPs) and to estimate physicians' acceptance of PI.
A prospective study of PIs was conducted in 6 French hospitals. The sample consisted of 300 randomized PIs per hospital, recorded during the medication order validation process when a DRP was identified. We recorded patients' demographic characteristics, drugs involved, wards, DRP description, pharmacists' recommendations, and whether or not the recommendations were accepted by the physicians.
A total of 38,626 medication orders were analyzed by 28 clinical pharmacists, leading to 1800 PIs (4.66 PIs per 100 medication orders). Of the 1800 PIs, 25.9% targeted psychotropic drugs, 15.9% targeted antithrombotic drugs, 15.5% targeted digestive and metabolic drugs, and 15.0% targeted cardiovascular drugs. The most commonly identified DRPs were nonconformity to guidelines or contraindication (21.3%), followed by improper administration (20.6%), supratherapeutic dose (19.2%), and drug interaction (12.6%). Nearly half (42.2%) of the pharmacists' recommendations were related to drug choice (drug switch 22.2%, drug discontinuation 16.3%, addition of a new drug 3.7%) followed by dose adjustment (23.8%), optimization of administration (21.9%; change of administration route 10.3%, administration modalities 11.6%), and need for drug monitoring (12.2%). The rate of physicians' acceptance was 73.4% (15.3% refusals, 11.3% not assessable).
In French hospitals, pharmacists contribute to preventing DRPs during medication order validation. This study suggests that a few types of drugs and errors constitute a substantial proportion of PIs. Knowledge of the most frequent DRPs could significantly increase the efficiency of clinical PIs.
大多数欧洲国家的临床药学活动正在开展;然而,关于这些活动的数据报告仍然很少。多中心研究对于规范和证明这些国家临床药学活动的价值是必要的。
记录临床药师的日常干预措施(PI),以确定干预趋势、药物以及与药物相关问题(DRP)最常相关的情况,并估计医生对PI的接受程度。
在6家法国医院对PI进行了一项前瞻性研究。样本包括每家医院300项随机选择的PI,在识别出DRP时的用药医嘱验证过程中进行记录。我们记录了患者的人口统计学特征、涉及的药物、病房、DRP描述、药师的建议以及医生是否接受这些建议。
28名临床药师共分析了38626份用药医嘱,得出1800项PI(每100份用药医嘱中有4.66项PI)。在这1800项PI中,25.9%针对精神药物,15.9%针对抗血栓药物,15.5%针对消化和代谢药物,15.0%针对心血管药物。最常识别出的DRP是不符合指南或禁忌(21.3%),其次是用药不当(20.6%)、超治疗剂量(19.2%)和药物相互作用(12.6%)。近一半(42.2%)的药师建议与药物选择有关(换药22.2%,停药16.3%,添加新药3.7%),其次是剂量调整(23.8%)、给药优化(21.9%;改变给药途径10.3%,给药方式11.6%)以及药物监测需求(12.2%)。医生的接受率为73.4%(拒绝率15.