| Literature DB >> 23843060 |
Wálleri Christini Torelli Reis, Carolinne Thays Scopel, Cassyano Januário Correr, Vânia Mari Salvi Andrzejevski.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the clinical pharmacist interventions performed during the review of prescription orders of the Adult Intensive Care, Cardiologic Intensive Care, and Clinical Cardiology Units of a large tertiary teaching hospital in Brazil.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23843060 PMCID: PMC4872893 DOI: 10.1590/s1679-45082013000200010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Einstein (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1679-4508
Drug therapy problem
| DTP | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Dose | 436 (46.73) |
| Dosing interval | 27 (2.89) |
| Route of administration | 1 (0.11) |
| Presentation and/or pharmaceutical form | 64 (6.86) |
| Inappropriate/unnecessary drug | 178 (19.08) |
| Necessity of additional medication | 49 (5.25) |
| More appropriate and/or available alternative therapy | 73 (7.82) |
| Drug interactions | 70 (7.50) |
| Prescription orders inconsistencies | 31 (3.32) |
| Dilution and/or infusion rate | 1 (0.11) |
| Physical-chemical incompatibilities and/or preparation stability | 3 (0.32) |
| Total | 933 |
DTP: drug therapy problem.
Drugs involved in drug therapy problems classified through the groups of the anatomical therapeutic chemical classification system
| ATC category | n (%)* |
|---|---|
| Alimentary tract and metabolism | 252 (27.01) |
| Blood and blood forming organs | 161 (17.26) |
| Cardiovascular system | 95 (10.18) |
| Dermatologicals | 12 (1.29) |
| Genito-urinary system and sex hormones | 1 (0.11) |
| Systemic hormonal preparations, excluding sex hormones and insulins | 42 (4.50) |
| Anti-inflammatory for systemic use | 192 (20.58) |
| Antineoplastic and immunomodulating agents | 6 (0.64) |
| Musculo-skeletal system | 7 (0.75) |
| Nervous system | 128 (13.72) |
| Antiparasitic products, insecticides and repellents | 4 (0.43) |
| Respiratory system | 10 (1.07) |
| Sensory organs | 0 (0) |
| Various | 23 (2.47) |
| Total | 933 (100) |
ATC: anatomical therapeutic chemical.
Pharmaceutical clinical interventions
| Pharmaceutical clinical interventions | n (%) | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Suspend drug | 177 (18.97) | Enoxaparin treatment dose in patient with active bleeding; two prescriptions of midazolam in the same order with different dose; omeprazole and ranitidine prescribed in the same order |
| Replace by safer, more effective and/or cost-effective drug | 70 (7.50) | Replace omeprazole by ranitidine for stress ulcer. The cost of omeprazole is greater than ranitidine and the efficacy of the prophylaxis is equivalent |
| Replace by safer, more effective, more cost-effective and/or available presentation/ pharmaceutical form | 75 (8.04) | Replace sublingual isosorbide dinitrate 5mg 3 times daily by immediate release isosorbide dinitrate 10mg 3 times daily; the sublingual presentation has a lower time of action than another to treat angina |
| Start drug | 46 (4.93) | Suggest starting polystyrene sulfonate in a patient with hyperkalemia. |
| Individualize/correct the posology | 470 (50.38) | Patient with clearance of creatinine (CrCl) <30mL/min, using enoxaparin. It is recommend to use 50% of the usual dose reported in literature. |
| Correct preparation and/or administration by nursing | 5 (0.54) | It is recommend that ceftriaxone and calcium gluconate are not administered together in Y catheter, due the high risk of chemical interaction |
| Correct order errors (recommendation/prescription) | 30 (3.22) | Prescription present insulin NPH 30UI in the morning but the order recommendation present insulin NPH 40UI |
| Provide information/education to healthcare professionals | 60 (6.43) | Patient was taking clarithromycin and amitriptyline, this association may prolong the QT interval. Give information to the responsible physician to improve monitoring toxicity signals |
| Total | 933 |
Figure 1Acceptability of the pharmaceutical clinical interventions