Meier Florian, Maas Renke, Sonst Anja, Patapovas Andrius, Müller Fabian, Plank-Kiegele Bettina, Pfistermeister Barbara, Schöffski Oliver, Bürkle Thomas, Dormann Harald
Department of Health Management, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Nuremberg, Germany.
Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2015 Feb;24(2):176-86. doi: 10.1002/pds.3663. Epub 2014 Jun 17.
Several economic evaluations of adverse drug events (ADEs) exist, but the underlying methodology has not been standardized so far. The aim of the study was to combine prospective, intensive pharmacovigilance methods, and standardized accounting data to calculate direct costs of community-acquired ADEs (caADEs) contributing to emergency department (ED) admission and subsequent hospitalization.
A prospective observational study with three phases extending over 2 years was implemented in a 749 bed tertiary care hospital with an annual ED census of approximately 45 000 patients. The patient records of all adult non-trauma ED admissions were systematically analyzed by a team of emergency physicians, clinical pharmacologists, and pharmacists for potential ADE. Associated diagnosis related group costs were extracted from standardized accounting data.
Of 2262 patients attending the ED during the study periods, the hospitalization of 366 patients (16.2%) was related to one or more caADEs of which 97.5% were considered predictable and 62.0% were classified as preventable. The mean caADE-related diagnosis related group costs were €2743 (95% bias-corrected and accelerated CI: €2498 to €3018). Extrapolated to a national scale, this corresponds to caADE-related costs of €2.245bn for the German health insurance funds, annually. Costs of €1.310bn could be attributed to events classified as predictable and preventable.
In an ED, caADEs are frequent, and a significant proportion of these events and their related costs appear to be predictable and preventable. The ED as a first-line provider for ADE cases appears to be an appropriate environment to implement strategic and operative improvements for enhanced patient safety.
目前已有多项关于药物不良事件(ADEs)的经济学评估,但基础方法至今尚未标准化。本研究的目的是结合前瞻性、强化药物警戒方法以及标准化会计数据,以计算导致急诊科(ED)就诊及随后住院的社区获得性药物不良事件(caADEs)的直接成本。
在一家拥有749张床位的三级护理医院开展了一项为期2年的前瞻性观察研究,该医院急诊科年接诊量约为45000例患者。由急诊医师、临床药理学家和药剂师组成的团队对所有成年非创伤性ED就诊患者的病历进行系统分析,以查找潜在的ADEs。从标准化会计数据中提取相关的诊断相关组成本。
在研究期间到急诊科就诊的2262例患者中,366例(16.2%)患者的住院与一种或多种caADEs相关,其中97.5%被认为是可预测的,62.0%被归类为可预防的。与caADEs相关的诊断相关组平均成本为2743欧元(95%偏差校正和加速置信区间:2498欧元至3018欧元)。推算到全国范围,这相当于德国医疗保险基金每年与caADEs相关的成本为22.45亿欧元。13.10亿欧元的成本可归因于被归类为可预测和可预防的事件。
在急诊科,caADEs很常见,这些事件及其相关成本的很大一部分似乎是可预测和可预防的。急诊科作为ADE病例的一线提供者,似乎是实施战略和操作改进以提高患者安全性的合适环境。