| Literature DB >> 16849782 |
Nicole Ansani1, Carl Sirio, Thomas Smitherman, Bethany Fedutes-Henderson, Susan Skledar, Robert J Weber, Nathalie Zgheib, Robert Branch.
Abstract
Innovative off-label medication use (defined as prescribing with reasonable rationale for use, but insufficient evidence to allay safety, efficacy, and cost-effectiveness concerns, yet is not clinical research) is common practice and provides challenges to ensuring high-quality health care and patient safety. This article describes a strategy to promote policy and standardization of innovative off-label medication use, ensure oversight of patient safety, and prospectively assess efficacy. A multidisciplinary group developed a policy and process to regulate innovative off-label medication use that standardizes formulary review, maximizes peer expertise input, and minimizes institution liability by evaluating the effectiveness of use, promoting evidence-based practices, and ensuring ethical obligations to patients and society. This strategy has been implemented through institutional staff structure. The review process balances benefits/risks for biologically plausible therapy that lacks rigorous data support. The authors' strategy illustrates collaboration that enables a priori consideration for innovative off-label medication use while providing safety surveillance and outcomes monitoring.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16849782 DOI: 10.1177/1062860606289020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Qual ISSN: 1062-8606 Impact factor: 1.852