Czaja Angela S, Reiter Pamela D, Schultz M Lynn, Valuck Robert J
Division of Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado ; Critical Care, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, Colorado ; Center for Pharmaceutical Outcomes Research, Aurora, Colorado.
Critical Care, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, Colorado ; Clinical Pharmacy, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, Colorado ; Department of Clinical Pharmacy, University of Colorado Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Aurora, Colorado.
J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther. 2015 May-Jun;20(3):186-96. doi: 10.5863/1551-6776-20.3.186.
To characterize off-label prescribing among US pediatric intensive care units (PICUs), determine characteristics associated with off-label use, and identify medications in highest need for additional study.
Medications prescribed for ≥1% PICU patients (age < 18 years) in 2010 were identified from 39 children's hospitals. Use in a patient younger than the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved age for any indication was considered off-label. Hierarchical multivariable modeling was used to identify characteristics associated with off-label use, accounting for center effects. Highest-impact drugs were defined by: 1) high off-label use (off-label use in at least 5% of the PICU cohort), 2) high risk medication, and 3) high priority status by the FDA or Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA).
A total of 66,896 patients received ≥1 medication of interest (n = 162) during their PICU stay. A median of 3 (interquartile range, 2-6) unique drugs per patient were used off-label. Those who received ≥1 drug off-label (85% of the cohort) had longer median PICU (2 days vs 1 day) and hospital (6 days vs 3 days) lengths of stay and higher mortality (3.6% vs 0.7%), p < 0.001. Factors independently associated with off-label drug use included: age 1 to 5 years, chronic conditions, acute organ failures, mechanical ventilation, arterial or venous catheters, dialysis, and blood products. Half of prescribed medications (n = 84) had been used off-label: 26 with significant off-label use, 30 high-risk medications, and 47 with high FDA/BPCA priority. The highest impact medications identified were: dexmedetomidine, dopamine, hydromorphone, ketamine, lorazepam, methadone, milrinone, and oxycodone.
Most PICU patients are exposed to off-label medication use, with uncertain evidence. Future medication research in this population should focus on medications with high impact potential.
描述美国儿科重症监护病房(PICU)中的超说明书用药情况,确定与超说明书用药相关的特征,并识别最需要进一步研究的药物。
从39家儿童医院中确定2010年为≥1%的PICU患者(年龄<18岁)开具的药物。用于任何适应症且年龄小于美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准年龄的患者被视为超说明书用药。采用分层多变量模型确定与超说明书用药相关的特征,并考虑中心效应。高影响药物的定义为:1)高比例超说明书用药(至少5%的PICU队列中有超说明书用药情况),2)高风险药物,以及3)FDA或《儿童最佳药品法案》(BPCA)规定的高优先级药物。
共有66,896名患者在其PICU住院期间接受了≥1种感兴趣的药物(n = 162)。每位患者超说明书使用的独特药物中位数为3种(四分位间距,2 - 6种)。那些接受≥1种超说明书用药的患者(占队列的85%)PICU住院时间中位数更长(2天对1天),住院时间中位数也更长(6天对3天),死亡率更高(3.6%对0.7%),p < 0.001。与超说明书用药独立相关的因素包括:1至5岁年龄、慢性病、急性器官衰竭、机械通气、动静脉导管、透析和血液制品。所开药物中有一半(n = 84)被超说明书使用:26种有显著的超说明书用药情况,30种为高风险药物,47种具有FDA/BPCA高优先级。确定的高影响药物为:右美托咪定、多巴胺、氢吗啡酮、氯胺酮、劳拉西泮、美沙酮、米力农和羟考酮。
大多数PICU患者会接触到超说明书用药,证据尚不明确。该人群未来的药物研究应聚焦于具有高潜在影响的药物。