4.7 Article

Prioritisation of Adverse Drug Events Leading to Hospital Admission and Occurring during Hospitalisation: A RAND Survey

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11154254

Keywords

adverse drug events; drug-related side effects; consensus; RAND survey; prioritisation; medication safety

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01ZZ1910H, 01ZZ1910L]

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The study utilized two consensus processes to identify the most important ADEs leading to hospital admission and occurring during hospital stay. The results highlighted acute kidney injury, hypoglycemia, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, and rhabdomyolysis as the events of highest importance.
(1) Adverse drug events (ADEs) are a common cause of emergency department visits and occur frequently during hospitalisation. Instruments that facilitate the detection of the most relevant ADEs could lead to a more targeted and efficient use of limited resources in research and practice. (2) We conducted two consensus processes based on the RAND/UCLA appropriateness method, in order to prioritise ADEs leading to hospital admission (panel 1) and occurring during hospital stay (panel 2) for inclusion in future ADE measurement instruments. In each panel, the experts were asked to assess the overall importance of each ADE on a four-point Likert scale (1 = not important to 4 = very important). ADEs with a median rating of >= 3 without disagreement were defined as prioritised. (3) The 13 experts in panel 1 prioritised 38 out of 65 ADEs, while the 12 experts in panel 2 prioritised 34 out of 63 ADEs. The highest rated events were acute kidney injury and hypoglycaemia (both panels), as well as Stevens-Johnson syndrome in panel 1 and rhabdomyolysis in panel 2. (4) The survey led to a set of ADEs for which there was consensus that they were of particular importance as presentations of acute medication-related harm, thereby providing a focus for further medication safety research and clinical practice.

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