Research Department, Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices, Bonn; Central Emergency Department, Hospital Fürth; Internal Medicine Emergency Department, Ulm University Medical Center; Interdisciplinary Emergency Department (INZ), University Hospital of Bonn; Dr. Margarete Fischer Bosch Institute of Clinical Pharmacology (IKP), Stuttgart; Institute for Clinical Pharmacology and Institute for Pharmacy and Biochemistry, University Hospital Tübingen; German Cancer Consortium (DKTK) and German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) Heidelberg; Center for Translational Medicine, Medical Faculty, University Bonn.
Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2018 Apr 13;115(15):251-258. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.2018.0251.
Adverse drug reactions (ADR) are a common reason for emergency room visits and for hospitalization. An ADR is said to have occurred when the patient's symptoms and signs are considered to be possibly, probably, or definitely related to the intake of a drug.
In four large hospital emergency departments, one in each of four German cities ( Ulm, Fürth, Bonn, and Stuttgart), the percentage of suspected ADR cases among all patients presenting to the emergency room was determined during a 30-day period of observation. ADRs were ascertained by screening the digital records of all patients seen in the emergency room; causality was assessed as specified by the WHO-UMC (Uppsala Monitoring Center).
ADR were sought in a total of 10 174 emergency department visits. 665 cases of suspected ADR were found, yielding a prevalence of 6.5%. The prevalence of ADR among patients with documented drug intake was 11.6%. Among the patients with documented suspected ADRs, 89% were hospitalized (in contrast to the 43.7% hospitalization rate in the entire group of 10 174 emergency department visits). A possible causal relationship between the patient's symptoms and signs and the intake of a drug was found in 74-84% of cases. Patients with ADR were found to be taking a median of 7 different drugs simultaneously.
Adverse drug reactions are a relevant cause of emergency department visits, accounting for 6.5% of the total visits in this study, and often lead to hospital admission. The ADRED (Adverse Drug Reactions in Emergency Departments) study, which is now being conducted, is intended to shed further light on their causes, patient risk factors, and potential avoidability.
药物不良反应(ADR)是急诊就诊和住院的常见原因。当患者的症状和体征被认为可能、很可能或肯定与药物摄入有关时,就会发生药物不良反应。
在四个德国城市(乌尔姆、菲尔特、波恩和斯图加特)的四个大型医院急诊部,在为期 30 天的观察期间,确定了所有到急诊就诊的患者中疑似 ADR 病例的比例。通过筛选急诊室所有就诊患者的电子记录来确定 ADR;因果关系的评估按照世界卫生组织-乌普萨拉监测中心(Uppsala Monitoring Center)的规定进行。
共对 10174 例急诊就诊患者进行了 ADR 调查。发现 665 例疑似 ADR 病例,患病率为 6.5%。有记录的药物摄入患者中 ADR 的患病率为 11.6%。在有记录的疑似 ADR 患者中,89%住院(而在 10174 例急诊就诊患者的整个住院率为 43.7%)。在 74%-84%的病例中,发现患者的症状和体征与药物摄入之间存在可能的因果关系。有 ADR 的患者同时服用的药物中位数为 7 种。
药物不良反应是急诊就诊的一个相关原因,占本研究总就诊人数的 6.5%,并且常常导致住院。目前正在进行的 ADRED(急诊药物不良反应)研究旨在进一步阐明其原因、患者的风险因素和潜在的可避免性。