Malone Daniel C, Saverno Kimberly R
College of Pharmacy, University of Arizona, 1295 N. Martin, Tucson, AZ 85721-0202, USA.
J Manag Care Pharm. 2012 Jan-Feb;18(1):33-45. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2012.18.1.33.
With the passage of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, widespread adoption of certain health information technologies, such as electronic health records (EHRs) and electronic prescribing (e-prescribing), is imminent. Drug-drug interaction (DDI) screening and medication history information are commonly incorporated into health information exchange systems to improve medical decision making, safety, and quality of care, but the value of these features is unclear.
To evaluate the effect of providing access to an early generation electronic medication management program with medication history accessible to prescribers via a wireless handheld personal digital assistant (PDA) device on the incidence of potential DDIs (i.e., DDIs that may or may not cause patient harm).
This study employed a retrospective pre-intervention/post-intervention study design with a comparison group to evaluate the effectiveness of a wireless handheld medication management program in preventing serious potential DDIs. Licensed prescribers in a state Medicaid program who wrote prescriptions during the period from August 2003 through June 2006 were included in this study. The intervention (PDA) group consisted of clinicians who requested and were granted access to the wireless handheld device containing prescription drug history between August 1, 2004, and June 30, 2005. Initially the device contained 100-day patient-specific medication history, but other functionalities were added during the study period including the ability to check for drug-drug interactions and e-prescribing. The comparison group consisted of prescribers who sent a request to obtain, but did not receive, the wireless handheld device during the same time period. Baseline prescribing patterns of 25 previously identified clinically important potential DDIs were assessed over two 12-month periods, one period prior to (baseline) and one period after (follow-up) an index date (date of device deployment for PDA group; date of request for comparison group). A random-effects negative binomial model was used to analyze the primary outcome, the number of potential DDIs per prescriber per 12-month time period. A secondary outcome of interest, the likelihood that a prescriber would prescribe at least 1 potentially interacting medication pair during the baseline and follow-up periods, was analyzed using a random-effects logistic model.
A total of 1,615 prescribers constituted the PDA group, and 600 prescribers made up the comparison group. Prescribers in the 2 groups were significantly different in their specialty practice areas (P less than 0.001), number of pharmacy claims at baseline (P less than 0.001), and the likelihood of prescribing at least 1 potential DDI combination during the 1-year baseline period (P=0.003). However, the prescriber groups were similar in their average age (P=0.241) and geographic location (P=0.181). The most widely prescribed potential DDIs included those involving warfarin with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and thyroid hormones. The median number of patient medication history updates requested per PDA group prescriber during follow-up was 24 (range 0 to 1,073). At baseline, 1,104 (68.4%) of the PDA group and 449 (74.8%) of the comparison group had no potential DDIs. During the next year, 1,131 (70.0%) and 462 (77.0%) of the PDA group and comparison group, respectively, had no DDIs. The incidence rate ratio was 1.01 (95% CI=0.87-1.17) for the PDA group relative to the comparison group for change in number of potential DDIs. In the logistic regression model, the odds of prescribing at least 1 potential DDI did not significantly differ by group (odds ratio=1.26, 95% CI=0.96-1.66). These results indicate that there was no significant difference between the intervention and comparison group with regard to the change in the rate of potential DDIs between the baseline and follow-up periods.
A stand-alone medication management program in a wireless PDA device was not frequently used by most prescribers to update patient medication histories and was not associated with a reduction in the rate of prescribing potentially clinically important DDIs.
随着《经济和临床健康的健康信息技术(HITECH)法案》的通过,某些健康信息技术,如电子健康记录(EHR)和电子处方(e-处方)的广泛采用即将到来。药物相互作用(DDI)筛查和用药史信息通常被纳入健康信息交换系统,以改善医疗决策、安全性和护理质量,但这些功能的价值尚不清楚。
评估通过无线手持个人数字助理(PDA)设备为开处方者提供早期电子药物管理程序及用药史对潜在DDI(即可能或可能不会对患者造成伤害的DDI)发生率的影响。
本研究采用回顾性干预前/干预后研究设计,并设对照组,以评估无线手持药物管理程序在预防严重潜在DDI方面的有效性。本研究纳入了2003年8月至2006年6月期间在某州医疗补助计划中开具处方的持牌开处方者。干预(PDA)组由在2004年8月1日至2005年6月30日期间申请并获得了包含处方药史的无线手持设备的临床医生组成。最初该设备包含100天的患者特定用药史,但在研究期间增加了其他功能,包括检查药物相互作用和电子处方的能力。对照组由在同一时期发送了获取无线手持设备的请求但未收到的开处方者组成。在两个12个月期间评估了25种先前确定的具有临床重要性的潜在DDI的基线处方模式,一个时期在索引日期之前(基线),一个时期在索引日期之后(随访)(PDA组为设备部署日期;对照组为请求日期)。使用随机效应负二项模型分析主要结局,即每个开处方者每12个月时间段内潜在DDI的数量。使用随机效应逻辑模型分析一个感兴趣的次要结局,即开处方者在基线期和随访期开具至少1对潜在相互作用药物的可能性。
共有1615名开处方者组成PDA组,600名开处方者组成对照组。两组开处方者在专业实践领域(P<0.001)、基线时的药房索赔数量(P<0.001)以及在1年基线期内开具至少1种潜在DDI组合的可能性(P=0.003)方面存在显著差异。然而,开处方者组在平均年龄(P=0.241)和地理位置(P=0.181)方面相似。最常开具的潜在DDI包括那些涉及华法林与非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)和甲状腺激素的药物。随访期间PDA组每个开处方者请求的患者用药史更新的中位数为24次(范围为0至1073次)。在基线时,PDA组的1104名(68.4%)和对照组的449名(74.8%)没有潜在DDI。在接下来的一年中,PDA组和对照组分别有1131名(70.0%)和462名(77.0%)没有DDI。PDA组相对于对照组潜在DDI数量变化的发生率比为1.01(95%CI=0.87-1.17)。在逻辑回归模型中,开具至少1种潜在DDI的几率在两组之间没有显著差异(优势比=1.26,95%CI=0.96-1.66)。这些结果表明,干预组和对照组在基线期和随访期之间潜在DDI发生率的变化方面没有显著差异。
大多数开处方者不经常使用无线PDA设备中的独立药物管理程序来更新患者用药史,且该程序与开具潜在临床重要DDI的比率降低无关。