Ramos G V, Guaraldo L, Japiassú A M, Bozza F A
Evandro Chagas Clinical Research Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
J Clin Pharm Ther. 2015 Feb;40(1):63-7. doi: 10.1111/jcpt.12222. Epub 2014 Oct 20.
Adverse drug events (ADE), common and underestimated in ICU patients, have direct consequences on length of stay, mortality and hospital costs. Critically ill patients with HIV/AIDS are at a high risk of ADE because of their need for multiple drug therapies. ADE can be prevented, especially by the identification of potentially harmful drug-drug interactions (DDIs). Electronic databases are useful tools for the investigation of DDIs to avoid potential ADEs, thereby increasing patient safety. The purpose of this study was to compare the classification and severity rating of potential adverse drug interactions seen in the prescriptions for patients with HIV/AIDS in two databases, one with free access (Drugs.com(™)) and another requiring payment for access (Micromedex(®)).
A cross-sectional retrospective study of the prescriptions issued for 40 ICU HIV/AIDS patients on mechanical ventilation, admitted for more than 48 h, in a referral hospital for infectious diseases in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, was undertaken. One prescription was reviewed each week for each patient from the second day after admission. A list of all drug-drug interactions was generated for each patient using the two drug-drug interactions databases. The weighted kappa index was estimated to assess the agreement between the classifications of DDIs identified by both databases and qualitative assessment made of any discordant classification of recorded drug-drug interactions.
Of the 106 prescriptions analysed, Micromedex(®) and Drugs.com identified 347 and 615 potential DDIs, respectively. A predominance of moderate interactions and pharmacokinetic interactions was observed. The agreement between the databases regarding the severity rating was only 68.3%. The weighted kappa of 0.44 is considered moderate. Better agreement (82.4%) was observed in the classification of mechanism of interaction, with a weighted kappa of 0.61.
DDIs are common between the prescriptions of patients with HIV/AIDS admitted to the ICU. Although both databases were able to identify the clinically relevant DDIs, we observed a significant discrepancy in the classification of the severity of DDIs in the two bases. The free access database could serve as an alternative to the identification of DDIs in resource-limited settings; however, there is a need for better evidence-based assessments for your use on clinical management of more serious DDIs.
药物不良事件(ADE)在重症监护病房(ICU)患者中很常见且常被低估,会对住院时间、死亡率和医院成本产生直接影响。患有人类免疫缺陷病毒/获得性免疫综合征(HIV/AIDS)的重症患者因需要多种药物治疗而面临较高的ADE风险。ADE是可以预防的,尤其是通过识别潜在有害的药物相互作用(DDI)。电子数据库是调查DDI以避免潜在ADE的有用工具,从而提高患者安全性。本研究的目的是比较两个数据库中HIV/AIDS患者处方中潜在药物相互作用的分类和严重程度评级,一个是免费访问的数据库(Drugs.com(™)),另一个是需要付费访问的数据库(Micromedex(®))。
对巴西里约热内卢一家传染病转诊医院收治的40例接受机械通气且住院超过48小时的ICU HIV/AIDS患者所开具的处方进行了横断面回顾性研究。从入院第二天起,每周对每位患者的一份处方进行审查。使用这两个药物相互作用数据库为每位患者生成所有药物相互作用的列表。估计加权kappa指数以评估两个数据库识别的DDI分类之间的一致性,以及对记录的药物相互作用的任何不一致分类进行定性评估。
在分析的106份处方中,Micromedex(®)和Drugs.com分别识别出347和615种潜在的DDI。观察到中度相互作用和药代动力学相互作用占主导。两个数据库在严重程度评级方面的一致性仅为68.3%。加权kappa值为0.44,被认为是中等程度。在相互作用机制分类方面观察到更好的一致性(82.4%),加权kappa值为0.61。
入住ICU的HIV/AIDS患者的处方中DDI很常见。虽然两个数据库都能够识别临床相关的DDI,但我们观察到两个数据库在DDI严重程度分类上存在显著差异。免费访问的数据库可以作为资源有限环境中识别DDI的替代方法;然而,需要更好的循证评估以便在更严重DDI的临床管理中使用。