Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vancouver General Hospital, 855 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 1M9, Canada.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of British Columbia, 855 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 1M9, Canada.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2018 Dec 4;18(1):160. doi: 10.1186/s12874-018-0617-4.
There is a high degree of variability in assessing the preventability of adverse drug events, limiting the ability to compare rates of preventable adverse drug events across different studies. We compared three methods for determining preventability of adverse drug events in emergency department patients and explored their strengths and weaknesses.
This mixed-methods study enrolled emergency department patients diagnosed with at least one adverse drug event from three prior prospective studies. A clinical pharmacist and physician reviewed the medical and research records of all patients, and independently rated each event's preventability using a "best practice-based" approach, an "error-based" approach, and an "algorithm-based" approach. Raters discussed discordant ratings until reaching consensus. We assessed the inter-rater agreement between clinicians using the same assessment method, and between different assessment methods using Cohen's kappa with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Qualitative researchers observed discussions, took field notes, and reviewed free text comments made by clinicians in a "comment" box in the data collection form. We developed a coding structure and iteratively analyzed qualitative data for emerging themes regarding the application of each preventability assessment method using NVivo.
Among 1356 adverse drug events, a best practice-based approach rated 64.1% (95% CI: 61.5-66.6%) of events as preventable, an error-based approach rated 64.3% (95% CI: 61.8-66.9%) of events as preventable, and an algorithm-based approach rated 68.8% (95% CI: 66.1-71.1%) of events as preventable. When applying the same method, the inter-rater agreement between clinicians was 0.53 (95% CI: 0.48-0.59), 0.55 (95%CI: 0.50-0.60) and 0.55 (95% CI: 0.49-0.55) for the best practice-, error-, and algorithm-based approaches, respectively. The inter-rater agreement between different assessment methods using consensus ratings for each ranged between 0.88 (95% CI 0.85-0.91) and 0.99 (95% CI 0.98-1.00). Compared to a best practice-based assessment, clinicians believed the algorithm-based assessment was too rigid. It did not account for the complexities of and variations in clinical practice, and frequently was too definitive when assigning preventability ratings.
There was good agreement between all three methods of determining the preventability of adverse drug events. However, clinicians found the algorithmic approach constraining, and preferred a best practice-based assessment method.
评估药物不良事件的可预防程度存在高度变异性,限制了在不同研究中比较可预防药物不良事件发生率的能力。我们比较了三种用于确定急诊科患者药物不良事件可预防程度的方法,并探讨了它们的优缺点。
这项混合方法研究纳入了来自三项前瞻性研究的至少发生了一起药物不良事件的急诊科患者。一名临床药师和一名医生查看了所有患者的医疗和研究记录,并分别使用基于最佳实践的方法、基于错误的方法和基于算法的方法来独立评估每个事件的可预防程度。评估者对不同意见进行了讨论,直到达成共识。我们使用同一评估方法评估临床医生之间的组内一致性,并使用 Cohen's kappa 及 95%置信区间(95%CI)评估不同评估方法之间的一致性。定性研究人员观察讨论情况、记录现场笔记,并在数据收集表的“注释”框中查看临床医生的自由文本注释。我们制定了一个编码结构,并使用 NVivo 对每种可预防评估方法的应用进行了迭代分析,以确定主题。
在 1356 起药物不良事件中,基于最佳实践的方法将 64.1%(95%CI:61.5-66.6%)的事件评为可预防,基于错误的方法将 64.3%(95%CI:61.8-66.9%)的事件评为可预防,基于算法的方法将 68.8%(95%CI:66.1-71.1%)的事件评为可预防。当使用相同方法时,临床医生之间的组内一致性分别为 0.53(95%CI:0.48-0.59)、0.55(95%CI:0.50-0.60)和 0.55(95%CI:0.49-0.55),分别为基于最佳实践、基于错误和基于算法的方法。使用共识评分的不同评估方法之间的组间一致性在 0.88(95%CI 0.85-0.91)和 0.99(95%CI 0.98-1.00)之间。与基于最佳实践的评估相比,临床医生认为基于算法的评估过于死板。它没有考虑到临床实践的复杂性和变化,并且在分配可预防评级时往往过于确定。
三种确定药物不良事件可预防程度的方法之间具有良好的一致性。然而,临床医生发现算法方法具有局限性,并且更倾向于基于最佳实践的评估方法。