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Published in: Drugs & Aging 1/2016

01-01-2016 | Original Research Article

Prevention of Adverse Drug Reactions in Hospitalised Older Patients Using a Software-Supported Structured Pharmacist Intervention: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial

Authors: David O’Sullivan, Denis O’Mahony, Marie N. O’Connor, Paul Gallagher, James Gallagher, Shane Cullinan, Richard O’Sullivan, Joseph Eustace, Stephen Byrne

Published in: Drugs & Aging | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

Proven interventions to reduce adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in older hospitalised patients are lacking. Previous randomised controlled trial (RCT) data indicate that a structured pharmacist review of medication (SPRM) can reduce inappropriate prescribing in older hospitalised patients. However, no RCT data show that an SPRM reduces ADRs in this population.

Methods

We performed a cluster RCT comparing a clinical decision support software (CDSS)-supported SPRM intervention with standard pharmaceutical care in older patients hospitalised with an acute unselected illness. Over 13 months, we screened 1833 patients aged ≥65 years admitted to specialist services other than geriatric medicine for study inclusion. We randomised 361 patients to the trial intervention arm and 376 patients to the control arm, applying the intervention at a single timepoint within 48 h of admission. The primary endpoint (ADR incidence) was assessed at 7–10 days post-admission or at discharge (whichever came first). The secondary endpoints were the median hospital length of stay (LOS) and hospital mortality rate.

Results

Attending clinicians in the intervention group implemented 54.8 % of SPRM/CDSS prescribing recommendations. Ninety-one ADRs occurred in 78 control patients (20.7 %) compared with 61 ADRs in 50 intervention patients (13.9 %), i.e., an absolute risk reduction of 6.8 %. The number needed to treat (NNT) to prevent one patient having one ADR was 15; the total NNT to prevent one ADR was 14. The median LOS and hospital mortality were not significantly different.

Conclusion

An SPRM delivered on a CDSS platform significantly reduces ADR incidence in acutely hospitalised older people.
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Metadata
Title
Prevention of Adverse Drug Reactions in Hospitalised Older Patients Using a Software-Supported Structured Pharmacist Intervention: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial
Authors
David O’Sullivan
Denis O’Mahony
Marie N. O’Connor
Paul Gallagher
James Gallagher
Shane Cullinan
Richard O’Sullivan
Joseph Eustace
Stephen Byrne
Publication date
01-01-2016
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Drugs & Aging / Issue 1/2016
Print ISSN: 1170-229X
Electronic ISSN: 1179-1969
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40266-015-0329-y

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