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Computerized detection of adverse drug reactions in the medical intensive care unit

Authors :
Louis E. Penrod
Shyam Visweswaran
Melissa Saul
An-Kwok Ian Wong
Steven M. Handler
Sandra L. Kane-Gill
Source :
International Journal of Medical Informatics. 80:570-578
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

Objective Clinical event monitors are a type of active medication monitoring system that can use signals to alert clinicians to possible adverse drug reactions. The primary goal was to evaluate the positive predictive values of select signals used to automate the detection of ADRs in the medical intensive care unit. Method This is a prospective, case series of adult patients in the medical intensive care unit during a six-week period who had one of five signals presents: an elevated blood urea nitrogen, vancomycin, or quinidine concentration, or a low sodium or glucose concentration. Alerts were assessed using 3 objective published adverse drug reaction determination instruments. An event was considered an adverse drug reaction when 2 out of 3 instruments had agreement of possible, probable or definite. Positive predictive values were calculated as the proportion of alerts that occurred, divided by the number of times that alerts occurred and adverse drug reactions were confirmed. Results 145 patients were eligible for evaluation. For the 48 patients (50% male) having an alert, the mean ± SD age was 62 ± 19 years. A total of 253 alerts were generated. Positive predictive values were 1.0, 0.55, 0.38 and 0.33 for vancomycin, glucose, sodium, and blood urea nitrogen, respectively. A quinidine alert was not generated during the evaluation. Conclusions Computerized clinical event monitoring systems should be considered when developing methods to detect adverse drug reactions as part of intensive care unit patient safety surveillance systems, since they can automate the detection of these events using signals that have good performance characteristics by processing commonly available laboratory and medication information.

Details

ISSN :
13865056
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Medical Informatics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....021d7aec16fb3d364278271b6cbe09ce
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2011.04.005