ORCID Profile
0000-0002-0202-6453
Current Organisation
University of Tasmania
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Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 19-04-2023
Publisher: Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Date: 31-10-2016
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 13-11-2017
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 26-09-2017
DOI: 10.1007/S40266-017-0490-6
Abstract: Adverse drug reactions are a major cause of hospital admissions in older in iduals, with the majority potentially preventable. Despite the apparent magnitude of this problem, little is known about rates of repeat admission to hospital as a result of adverse drug reactions. The objectives of this study were to investigate the occurrence of repeat adverse drug reaction-related hospital admissions in elderly patients within 12 months of an adverse drug reaction-related admission to a medical ward and whether a validated adverse drug reaction score could be useful in identifying patients at higher risk of a repeat adverse drug reaction-related hospitalisation. This retrospective study followed elderly participants who were hospitalised with an adverse drug reaction from our earlier study [the PADR-EC (Prediction of Hospitalization due to Adverse Drug Reactions in Elderly Community-Dwelling Patients) study] to identify repeat adverse drug reaction-related hospital admissions within 12 months of discharge. The PADR-EC score is the sum of points assigned to five significant predictors of adverse drug reaction-related hospitalisation: antihypertensive use, renal failure, dementia, inappropriate anticholinergic use and drug changes in the preceding 3 months. The causality, preventability and severity of each adverse drug reaction-related repeat admission within the 12-month follow-up were assessed. Adverse drug reaction-related repeat admissions occurred after 13.4% (n = 15) of 112 adverse drug reaction-related index admissions. Patients with a repeat adverse drug reaction-related admission had significantly higher PADR-EC scores at discharge of their index admission (median PADR-EC score 7, interquartile range 7-9) than patients who were not readmitted (median PADR-EC score 7, interquartile range 5-7, p = 0.034). Most (73.3%) adverse drug reaction-related repeat admissions were considered 'preventable'. Adverse drug reaction severity was 'moderate' in all cases. Renal disorders (44.4%) represented the most common adverse drug reactions and the most frequently implicated drug classes were diuretics (44.8%). All adverse drug reaction-related repeat admissions were found to be 'probable'. One in eight elderly patients hospitalised because of an adverse drug reaction had a repeat admission for an adverse drug reaction within 12 months of discharge. The PADR-EC score could potentially be used at hospital discharge to prioritise patients for interventions to prevent subsequent adverse drug reaction-related hospital admissions.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 28-09-2018
DOI: 10.1002/PDS.4667
Abstract: To compare prospective identification of adverse drug reaction (ADR)-related hospital admissions in the elderly with administrative coding using the International Classification of Diseases 10 We linked the records of 768 enrolled patients from an earlier study, where clinical pharmacists identified ADRs using prospective data collection, to hospital administrative data. We identified patients in the study whose admissions were coded as ADRs using ICD-10-AM codes. We then compared the prevalence and characteristics of ADR-related hospital admissions identified by the two approaches. According to ICD-10-AM coding, 2.7% of patients were admitted due to ADRs, while 15.0% of patients were deemed to have been admitted due to ADRs based on prospective identification by clinical pharmacists. Most (85.7%) patients coded as having an ADR-related hospital admission were also identified as such prospectively. Hematological (23.1%) and metabolic reactions (23.1%) were frequent causes of ADRs identified by coding, whereas cardiovascular ADRs (27.8%) were more common causes of ADRs identified prospectively by pharmacists. Antidepressants (16.7%) and cardiac glycosides (16.7%) were the most commonly implicated drug groups in ADRs identified by coding, whereas diuretics (28.8%) and renin-angiotensin system inhibitors (17.0%) were frequently implicated as causes of ADRs identified prospectively by pharmacists. Reliance on administrative coding potentially underestimates the extent of the problem of ADRs as a cause of hospitalization in the elderly, and more detailed prospective analysis of admissions provides additional targets for strategies to prevent ADRs. The types of ADRs identified also differ between the two approaches.
No related grants have been discovered for Nibu Parameswaran Nair.