| Literature DB >> 24228998 |
Signe Thiesen1, Elizabeth J Conroy, Jennifer R Bellis, Louise E Bracken, Helena L Mannix, Kim A Bird, Jennifer C Duncan, Lynne Cresswell, Jamie J Kirkham, Matthew Peak, Paula R Williamson, Anthony J Nunn, Mark A Turner, Munir Pirmohamed, Rosalind L Smyth.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are an important cause of harm in children. Current data are incomplete due to methodological differences between studies: only half of all studies provide drug data, incidence rates vary (0.6% to 16.8%) and very few studies provide data on causality, severity and risk factors of pediatric ADRs. We aimed to determine the incidence of ADRs in hospitalized children, to characterize these ADRs in terms of type, drug etiology, causality and severity and to identify risk factors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24228998 PMCID: PMC4225679 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-11-237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Excluded medicinal products
| Topical anesthetics | Lidocaine 2.5%, prilocaine 2.5% cream (EMLA®) or tetracaine 4% gel (Ametop®) | LAT gel (lidocaine 4% and adrenaline 0.1% and tetracaine 0.5% gel) |
| Ranitidine | Ranitidine added to TPN | Ranitidine administered otherwise |
| Heparin | Heparin administered as intermittent intravenous heparin flush. | Intermittent intravenous injection other than heparin flush, heparin administered as continuous intravenous infusion or as subcutaneous injection. |
| Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) | Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) | |
| Intravenous hydration fluids | Intravenous hydration fluids | Any drugs added to intravenous fluids |
| Rectal washouts | Rectal washouts with sodium chloride 0.9% | |
| Blood products | Red cells | Antithrombin III concentrate |
| Platelets | Dried prothrombin complex | |
| Cryoprecipitate | Drotrecogin alfa (activated) | |
| Albumin solutions | Factor VIIa (recombinant) | |
| Fresh frozen plasma | Factor VIII fraction, dried | |
| Factor VIII inhibitor by-passing fraction | ||
| Factor IX fraction, dried | ||
| Factor XIII fraction, dried | ||
| Protein C concentrate | ||
| Oxygen therapy | Oxygen therapy |
Figure 1Flowchart outlining the number of admissions included in the univariate and multivariate risk factor analysis.
Assessment of severity using the Hartwig severity scale
| 1 | Required no change in treatment | 322 | 22.3% |
| 2 | Drug dosing or frequency changed | 66 | 4.6% |
| 3 | Required treatment or drug administration discontinued | 1,046 | 72.3% |
| 4 | Resulted in patient transfer to higher level of care | 12 | 0.8% |
| 5 | Caused permanent harm to patient or significant hemodynamic instability | 1 | 0.1% |
| 6 | Directly or indirectly resulted in patient death | 0 | 0% |
aDenominator was the total number of probable or definite ADRs. ADRs, adverse drug reactions.
Severe reactions (Hartwig scale ≥4) by reaction type and medication implicated
| 4 | Cardiac failure (1) | Bisoprolol (1), Carvedilol (1)a | HDU |
| Sedation withdrawal (1)b | Fentanyl (1), Midazolam (1), Promethazine (1) , Chloral hydrate (1) | PICU | |
| Raised INR and hemorrhage (1) | Warfarin (1) | HDU | |
| Pulmonary edema (1) | Diazoxide (1) | HDU | |
| Respiratory depression (5) | Fentanyl (4), Ketamine (2), Midazolam (1), | PICU (3)c HDU (2) | |
| Respiratory arrest (2) | Fentanyl (2), Sevoflurane (1), Isoflurane (1), Ketamine (1) | PICU, HDU | |
| 5 | Peripheral neuropathy (1) | Vincristine (1) | N/A |
aBoth drugs caused significant fluid retention in this patient; bthis patient had been on sedating drugs for 10 days by the time withdrawal became clinically significant; cADR was not the only factor leading to PICU admission; other clinical factors may also have contributed. ADR adverse drug reaction, HDU high dependency unit, INR international normalized ratio, PICU pediatric ICU.
Common ADR types observed
| | ||||
| Nausea and/or vomiting | 400 | 27.5% | 295 | 73.8% |
| Pruritus | 243 | 16.7% | 232 | 95.5% |
| Constipation | 155 | 10.6% | 107 | 69.0% |
| Diarrhea (9/88 with vomiting) | 88 | 6.0% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Somnolence (without cardio-respiratory symptoms) | 50 | 3.4% | 34 | 68.0% |
| Respiratory depression (41)/arrest (3) | 44 | 3.0% | 43 | 97.7% |
| Candidiasis | 41 | 2.8% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Urinary retention | 40 | 2.7% | 37 | 92.5% |
| Rash | 31 | 2.1% | 3 | 9.7% |
| Hypokalemia | 25 | 1.7% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Hypotension | 22 | 1.5% | 9 | 40.9% |
| Hepatotoxicity(6)/increased transaminases (12)c | 18 | 1.2% | 1 | 5.6% |
| Stomatitis | 16 | 1.1% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Myoclonus | 15 | 1.0% | 14 | 93.3% |
| Pancytopenia | 13 | <1% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Hyperglycemia | 12 | <1% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Hypertension | 11 | <1% | 2 | 18.2% |
| Allergic reactions | 10 | <1% | 3 | 30.0% |
| Pain (4/10 pain in jaw, 2/10 back pain) | 10 | <1% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Other reactions ( occurred <10 times) | 213 | 14.6% | 65 | 30.5% |
| Total | 1,457 | 845 | 58.0% | |
aIf the same patient experienced two types of reactions to the same medication(s) at the same time this would have been reported as one ADR case but will be listed here as two reaction types, for example, a patient with respiratory depression and bradycardia = one ADR case, but is listed as two reactions; breaction occurred post theater AND drugs given in theater and/or used in post-operative pain management were implicated; ctransaminases were raised in all cases. Additionally, if other parameters of liver function such as bilirubin and INR were also raised, we classified this as hepatotoxicity. ADR, adverse drug reaction, GA general anesthesia; N number, INR international normalized ratio.
Univariate analysis by categorical time invariant risk factor
| Gender | Male | 2,602 | 382 | 0.900 |
| Female | 2,122 | 312 | ||
| Age | Infant (<1 years) | 1,369 | 78 | <0.001 |
| Pre-school (1 to 5 years) | 1,259 | 155 | ||
| School-aged (5 to 11 years) | 1,105 | 231 | ||
| Teenage (>11 years) | 991 | 230 | ||
| Oncology | Yes | 106 | 649 | <0.001 |
| No | 4,625 | 45 | ||
aOnly the first ADR was included in this analysis. ADR adverse drug reaction.
Figure 2Cumulative incidence curves by categorical time invariant risk factor: (A) by age category, (B) gender and (C) oncology status.
Risk factors for ADRs assessed by multivariate analysis
| Age on admission (in years) | | 1.06 (1.04 to 1.07) | <0.001 |
| Gender | Female | 1 | 0.301 |
| Male | 0.93 (0.80 to 1.08) | ||
| Number of drugs | | 1.25 (1.22 to 1.28) | <0.001 |
| Received a GA | No | 1 | <0.001 |
| Yes | 6.38 (5.30 to 7.68) | ||
| Oncology | No | 1 | <0.001 |
| Yes | 1.89 (1.36 to 2.63) | ||
ADRs adverse drug reactions, CI confidence interval, GA general anesthesia, HR hazard ratio.