Prevention of adverse drug reactions in intensive care patients by personal intervention based on an electronic clinical decision support system

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Abstract

Objective: We investigated the effect of written drug information for senior clinicians on the incidence of drug-drug interactions (DDIs) and DDI-related adverse events in intensive care patients. Design and methods: A prospective controlled intervention cohort study was conducted in a medical intensive and intermediate care unit in a university hospital. From 1,062 consecutive intensive care patients, those 265 (control: 136, intervention: 129) with ≥8 concurrently prescribed drugs were included in the study (to include high-risk patients with polypharmacy). The DDI information for senior clinicians during an intervention period of 3 months was based on a computerised clinical decision support system (CDSS) containing information on risk and management of 9,453 drug combinations. Results: The number of patients with at least one DDI at the end of the respective study phase decreased by 18% (relative risk reduction) from 90 (66%) patients in controls to 70 (54%) in the intervention group (p = 0.02). The relative risk of a patient suffering from at least one DDI-related adverse event decreased by 43% from 60 (44%) patients in controls to 32 (25%) in the intervention group (p < 0.01). Among these events, the incidence of QTC prolongation was reduced by 64% from 15 (11%) patients in the control group to 5 (4%) in the intervention group (p = 0.04), and the incidence of hypokalemia by 80% from 14 (10%) to 2 (2%, p < 0.01). Conclusion: Written drug information based on a CDSS considerably decreased DDIs and DDI-related adverse events in routine practice. © 2010 Copyright jointly hold by Springer and ESICM.

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Bertsche, T., Pfaff, J., Schiller, P., Kaltschmidt, J., Pruszydlo, M. G., Stremmel, W., … Encke, J. (2010). Prevention of adverse drug reactions in intensive care patients by personal intervention based on an electronic clinical decision support system. Intensive Care Medicine, 36(4), 665–672. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-010-1778-8

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