Kongsholm Gertrud Gansmo, Nielsen Anna Katrine Toft, Damkier Per
Clinical Pharmacology, Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, DK-5000, Odense, Denmark.
Department of Clinical Biochemistry and Pharmacology, Odense University Hospital, DK-5000, Odense, Denmark.
Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2015 Nov;71(11):1397-402. doi: 10.1007/s00228-015-1943-7. Epub 2015 Sep 15.
It is well documented that drug-drug interaction databases (DIDs) differ substantially with respect to classification of drug-drug interactions (DDIs). The aim of this study was to study online available transparency of ownership, funding, information, classifications, staff training, and underlying documentation of the five most commonly used open access English language-based online DIDs and the three most commonly used subscription English language-based online DIDs in the literature.
We conducted a systematic literature search to identify the five most commonly used open access and the three most commonly used subscription DIDs in the medical literature. The following parameters were assessed for each of the databases: Ownership, classification of interactions, primary information sources, and staff qualification. We compared the overall proportion of yes/no answers from open access databases and subscription databases by Fisher's exact test-both prior to and after requesting missing information.
Among open access DIDs, 20/60 items could be verified from the webpage directly compared to 24/36 for the subscription DIDs (p = 0.0028). Following personal request, these numbers rose to 22/60 and 30/36, respectively (p < 0.0001). For items within the "classification of interaction" domain, proportions were 3/25 versus 11/15 available from the webpage (P = 0.0001) and 3/25 versus 15/15 (p < 0.0001) available upon personal request.
Available information on online available transparency of ownership, funding, information, classifications, staff training, and underlying documentation varies substantially among various DIDs. Open access DIDs had a statistically lower score on parameters assessed.
有充分文献记载,药物相互作用数据库(DIDs)在药物相互作用(DDIs)分类方面存在很大差异。本研究的目的是探讨文献中最常用的五个基于英语的开放获取在线DIDs和三个最常用的基于英语的订阅式在线DIDs在所有权、资金、信息、分类、人员培训及基础文档方面的在线可得透明度。
我们进行了系统的文献检索,以确定医学文献中最常用的五个开放获取DIDs和三个最常用的订阅式DIDs。对每个数据库评估以下参数:所有权、相互作用分类、主要信息来源和人员资质。我们通过Fisher精确检验比较了开放获取数据库和订阅式数据库在请求缺失信息前后“是/否”回答的总体比例。
在开放获取DIDs中,网页上可直接核实60项中的20项,而订阅式DIDs为36项中的24项(p = 0.0028)。经个人请求后,这些数字分别升至22/60和30/36(p < 0.0001)。对于“相互作用分类”领域内的项目,网页上可得比例为3/25对11/15(P = 0.0001),经个人请求后为3/25对15/15(p < 0.0001)。
不同DIDs在所有权、资金、信息、分类、人员培训及基础文档的在线可得透明度方面的可用信息差异很大。开放获取DIDs在评估参数上的得分在统计学上较低。