Hughes John E, Bennett Kathleen E, Cahir Caitriona
School of Population Health, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dublin 2, Ireland.
Data Science Centre, School of Population Health, RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dublin 2, Ireland.
Int J Clin Pharm. 2025 Apr 10. doi: 10.1007/s11096-025-01907-1.
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are associated with greater healthcare costs; drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are a common cause of ADRs.
To estimate the risk and cost of ADR-related hospital admission associated with DDI-exposure versus no DDI-exposure in an older community-dwelling population.
This is a secondary analysis of a cohort study among 798 older individuals admitted acutely to hospital in Ireland (2016-2017). Full medication-history (pre-admission) was used to measure severe DDIs. Hospital costs were derived from unit costs. Logistic regression and propensity score weighting was used to examine the association between DDI-exposure and ADR-related hospital admission. Quantile regression was used to examine median costs associated with DDI-exposure. Adjusted odds-ratios (aORs), adjusted median costs, and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) are reported.
N = 782 (98%) individuals using ≥ 2 drugs were included. Mean age: 80.9(SD ± 7.5) years; 52.2% female; 45.1% with an ADR-related admission. Pre-admission, n = 316 (40.4%) patients had any severe DDI, n = 466 unexposed; n = 113 (14.5%) had a DDI which increases bleeding risk, n = 669 unexposed. The risk of ADR-related hospital admission associated with any severe DDI was aOR = 1.02 [95% CI: 0.82, 1.28]), and aOR = 1.83 [95% CI: 1.35, 2.44]) for DDIs which increase bleeding risk. The median cost of ADR-related hospital admission associated with any severe DDI versus none, was €880 [- 1205, 3055]; and €3,520 [- 934, 7974] for a DDI which increases bleeding risk versus none.
DDIs which increase bleeding risk were associated with greatest ADR-related hospital admission risk and highest costs for the healthcare system. Further research examining these DDIs is needed.
药物不良反应(ADR)与更高的医疗成本相关;药物相互作用(DDI)是ADR的常见原因。
评估在老年社区居住人群中,与暴露于DDI相比未暴露于DDI的情况下,与ADR相关的住院风险和成本。
这是一项对爱尔兰798名急性入院的老年人(2016 - 2017年)进行的队列研究的二次分析。使用完整的用药史(入院前)来衡量严重的DDI。医院成本来自单位成本。采用逻辑回归和倾向得分加权来检验暴露于DDI与ADR相关住院之间的关联。使用分位数回归来检验与暴露于DDI相关的中位数成本。报告调整后的优势比(aOR)、调整后的中位数成本和95%置信区间(CI)。
纳入了使用≥2种药物的782名(98%)个体。平均年龄:80.9(标准差±7.5)岁;52.2%为女性;45.1%因ADR相关入院。入院前,316名(40.4%)患者有任何严重的DDI,466名未暴露;113名(14.5%)有增加出血风险的DDI,669名未暴露。与任何严重DDI相关的ADR相关住院风险的aOR = 1.02 [95% CI:0.82, 1.28]),对于增加出血风险的DDI,aOR = 1.83 [95% CI:1.35, 2.44])。与任何严重DDI相比无DDI的情况下,ADR相关住院的中位数成本为880欧元[-1205, 3055];对于增加出血风险的DDI与无DDI相比,为3520欧元[-934, 7974]。
增加出血风险的DDI与最高的ADR相关住院风险和医疗系统的最高成本相关。需要进一步研究这些DDI。