| Literature DB >> 24533894 |
Shi Qing-ping1, Jiang Xiao-dong, Ding Feng, Liu Yan, Yu Mei-ling, Zhu Jin-xiu, Zhang Shu-qiang.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are a leading cause of morbidity in developed countries and represent a substantial burden on health-care resources. Many countries spent 15% to 20% of their hospital budgets to treat drug complications. However, few studies have measured the pharmacoeconomic effects of ADRs on hospitalized patients in China. The study estimates the costs of ADRs as identified from the spontaneous voluntary reports completed from healthcare professionals. To do so, we calculate these costs, determine the sum of Medicare payments and their proportion of total healthcare spending, and evaluate the incidence of ADRs, characteristics of hospitalized ADR patients, and outcomes of ADRs in China.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24533894 PMCID: PMC3931293 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-73
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
The demographic characteristics of the patients in the three groups A and B
| Group A | 174 | 301 | 667 | 808 | 514 | 234 | 2698 |
| Male | 118 | 152 | 237 | 332 | 291 | 153 | 1283 |
| Female | 56 | 149 | 430 | 476 | 223 | 81 | 1415 |
| Group B | 2 | 3 | 5 | 8 | 6 | 17 | 41 |
| Male | 1 | 2 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 14 | 24 |
| Female | 1 | 1 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 17 |
| Total (%) | 176 | 304 | 672 | 816 | 520 | 251 | 2739 |
| (6.43) | (11.10) | (24.53) | (29.79) | (18.99) | (9.16) | (100.00) | |
| Male (%) | 119 | 154 | 238 | 337 | 292 | 167 | 1307 |
| (4.35) | (5.62) | (8.69) | (12.30) | (10.66) | (6.10) | (47.72) | |
| Female (%) | 57 | 150 | 434 | 479 | 228 | 84 | 1432 |
| (2.08) | ((5.48) | (15.84) | (17.49) | (8.33) | (3.06) | (52.28) | |
Sum of the cost estimates for ADR cases over 5 years of the two groups
| | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group A | 178656.19 | 157172.62 | 193235.84 | 219061.13 (65.23 %) | 335820.06, 124.47 | 529077.80, 196.10 | 817401.69, 603252.81, 214148.88 |
| Group B | 183886.91 | 83545.92 | 20890.99 | 105422.02 (39.42 %) | 267432.75 | 288323.89, 7032.29 | |
| 6522.75 | |||||||
Relationship between gender and adverse reaction of patient
| Male | | | |
| No. | 1307 | 167109 | 168416 |
| Rate (per 1000 patients) | 7.76 | 992.24 | |
| Female | | | |
| No. | 1432 | 167327 | 168759 |
| Rate (per 1000 patients) | 8.49 | 991.51 | |
| Total | 2739 | 334436 | 337175 |
Correlation of adverse drug reaction (ADR)-related hospitalizations in China by age group
| No. of patients (ADR-related hospitalization | 176 | 304 | 672 | 816 | 520 | 251 | 2739 |
| Rate (per 1000 patients) | 4.48 | 4.22 | 6.18 | 11.81 | 23.73 | 22.35 | 8.50 |
| No. of patients (ADR induced by antibiotics) | 92 | 125 | 262 | 248 | 152 | 77 | 956 |
| Rate (per 1000 patients) | 2.34 | 1.74 | 2.41 | 3.59 | 6.94 | 6.86 | 2.97 |
| No. of patients (non-ADR-related hospitalization) | 39067 | 71690 | 108031 | 68303 | 21396 | 10979 | 319466 |
| Rate (per 1000 patients) | 995.52 | 995.78 | 993.82 | 988.19 | 976.27 | 977.65 | 991.50 |
| Total no. of patients | 39243 | 71994 | 108703 | 69119 | 21916 | 11230 | 322205 |
Top twenty pharmaceuticals that caused ADRs
| Levofloxacin | J01MA01 | 192 | 7.01% | 1 |
| Aminomethylbenzoic acid | B02AA01 | 176 | 6.43% | 2 |
| Vitamin K1 | B02BA01 | 89 | 3.25% | 3 |
| Cefathiamidine | J01DB01 | 52 | 1.90% | 4 |
| Mezlocillin | J01CE01 | 48 | 1.75% | 5 |
| Cefoperazone | J01DD01 | 47 | 1.72% | 6 |
| Ciprofloxacin | J01MA01 | 45 | 1.64% | 7 |
| Shenmai injection | TCM | 42 | 1.53% | 8 |
| Compound amino acid | B05B002 | 40 | 1.46% | 9 |
| Iopromide | V08AB02 | 40 | 1.46% | 9 |
| Sodium Aescinate for injection | TCM | 36 | 1.31% | 10 |
| Diammonium glycyrrhizinate | A05BA08 | 33 | 1.20% | 11 |
| Cefoperazone sodium and sulbactam sodium for injection | J01DD12 | 33 | 1.20% | 11 |
| Pefloxacin | J01MA03 | 33 | 1.20% | 11 |
| Shengmai injection | TCM | 31 | 1.13% | 12 |
| Shuganning injection | TCM | 31 | 1.13% | 12 |
| Tanreqing injection | TCM | 31 | 1.13% | 12 |
| Cefoxitin | J01DC01 | 31 | 1.13% | 12 |
| Ornithine aspartate | A05BA | 30 | 1.10% | 13 |
| Shuanghuanglian for injection | TCM | 28 | 1.02% | 14 |
| Tiopronin | A05BA | 27 | 0.99% | 15 |
| Matrine | A05BA | 27 | 0.99% | 15 |
| Cefotiam | J01DC07 | 27 | 0.99% | 15 |
| Ceftazidime | J01DD02 | 27 | 0.99% | 15 |
| Ceftizoxime | J01DD07 | 25 | 0.91% | 16 |
| Cefotiam | J01DC07 | 25 | 0.91% | 16 |
| Enoxacin gluconate | J01MA04 | 25 | 0.91% | 16 |
| Piperacillin sodium and sulbactam sodium/three triazole | J01RA01 | 24 | 0.88% | 17 |
| Fosfomycin | J01XX01 | 24 | 0.88% | 17 |
| Azithromycin | J01FA10 | 23 | 0.84% | 18 |
| Potassium aspartate and magnesium | A12BA | 23 | 0.84% | 18 |
| Vitamin B6 | A11DB | 23 | 0.84% | 18 |
| Aztreonam for injection | J01DF01 | 22 | 0.80% | 19 |
| Yadanzi youru zhusheye | TCM | 20 | 0.73% | 20 |