| Literature DB >> 28965265 |
Mette Heringa1,2,3, Annemieke Floor-Schreudering4,5, Hans Wouters6, Peter A G M De Smet7, Marcel L Bouvy4,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The management of drug-drug interactions (DDIs) is a complex process in which risk-benefit assessments should be combined with the patient's perspective.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28965265 PMCID: PMC5808046 DOI: 10.1007/s40264-017-0601-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Saf ISSN: 0114-5916 Impact factor: 5.606
Fig. 1Annotated example of choice set for patients. Example of a choice set, starting with a short description of the case (wording for patients). The choice set shows two options; respondents have to choose either option A or option B. For the complete questionnaire, see Electronic Supplementary Material 1
Attributes and levels
| Attribute | Explanation | Levels | Corresponding DDI management optiona |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serious muscle problems with permanent damage | The risk of serious muscle problems with permanent damage | In 1 of 10,000 people | MO2, MO3, MO4 |
| In 3 of 10,000 people | MO1 | ||
| Blood sampling twice during antibiotic course | Whether or not blood is sampled twice during the antibiotic course. By blood testing, muscle problems can be diagnosed at an early stage, before they become serious | No | MO1, MO2, MO3 |
| Yes | MO4 | ||
| Curing pneumonia without hospitalization | The chance of recovering from pneumonia without hospitalization | In 95 of 100 people | MO1, MO2, MO4 |
| In 90 of 100 people | MO3 | ||
| Moderate muscle pain | The risk of moderate muscle pain. With moderate muscle pain, you are limited in your daily activities (work, hobby) | In 5 of 100 people | MO2, MO3 |
| In 10 of 100 people | MO1, MO4 | ||
| Switch to other cardiovascular drug | Whether or not you switch to another cardiovascular medicine, instead of the one you are using at the moment | No | MO1, MO3, MO4 |
| Yes | MO2 |
DDI drug–drug interaction, MO management option
a MO1: no action, use both drugs concurrently; MO2: replacement of the medicine the patient is already using; MO3: replacement of the newly prescribed medicine of choice; or MO4: extra monitoring by blood testing
Fig. 2Flowchart respondents
Descriptive characteristics of respondents
| Patients |
| |
|---|---|---|
| Age | Mean (SD) | 64.4 (9.6) |
| Sex | Male | 186 (62.4%) |
| Educational levela | Low | 79 (26.9%) |
| Medium | 115 (39.1%) | |
| High | 100 (34.0%) | |
| Number of medicines in use | Mean (SD) | 4.7 (2.7) |
| Duration of use of cardiovascular medicines | < = 5 years | 27.9% |
| > 5 years | 72.1% | |
| SNS | Mean (SD) | 4.2 (0.8) |
| FCCHL total | Mean (SD) | 2.9 (0.5) |
| FCCHL functional | Mean (SD) | 3.0 (0.5) |
| FCCHL communicative | Mean (SD) | 3.2 (0.6) |
| FCCHL critical | Mean (SD) | 2.6 (0.7) |
FCCHL Functional Communicative and Critical Health Literacy Scales, SD standard deviation, SNS subjective numeracy scale
a Educational level was categorized as low (primary education or lower secondary), medium (intermediate/higher secondary or intermediate vocational), or high (higher vocational/university); data were missing for four respondents
Results of patients’ latent class analysis
| Attribute | Level | Class 1: ‘stability focused’ (20.3%)a | Class 2: ‘risk focused’ (41.0%)a | Class 3: ‘certainty focused’ (38.7%)a | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Utility (SE) | RI | Utility (SE) | RI | Utility (SE) | RI | ||
| Muscle damage | 1 of 10,000 | 0.62 (0.09)b | 21.9% | 1.39 (0.07)b | 49.7% | 0.21 (0.04)b | 25.6% |
| 3 of 10,000 | −0.62 (0.09)b | −1.39 (0.07)b | −0.21(0.04)b | ||||
| Blood sampling twice | No | −0.28 (0.08)b | 9.7% | 0.005 (0.05) | 0.2% | −0.25 (0.03)b | 30.5% |
| Yes | 0.28 (0.08)b | −0.005 (0.05) | 0.25 (0.03)b | ||||
| Curing pneumonia without hospitalization | 95 of 100 | 0.14 (0.08) | 4.9% | 0.68 (0.06)b | 24.3% | 0.04 (0.04) | 5.1% |
| 90 of 100 | −0.14 (0.08) | −0.68 (0.06)b | −0.04 (0.04) | ||||
| Moderate muscle pain | 5 of 100 | 0.13 (0.07) | 4.6% | 0.52 (0.05)b | 18.7% | 0.18 (0.04)b | 22.1% |
| 10 of 100 | −0.13 (0.07) | −0.52 (0.05)b | −0.18 (0.04)b | ||||
| Switch of cardiovascular drug | No | 1.68 (0.12)b | 58.9% | 0.20 (0.05)b | 7.0% | −0.13 (0.04)b | 16.8% |
| Yes | −1.68 (0.12)b | −0.20 (0.05)b | 0.13 (0.04)b | ||||
RI relative importance, SE standard error
a Average class probability
b p < 0.05
Results of pharmacists’ latent class analysis
| Attribute | Level | Class 1: ‘risk focused’ (31.3%)a | Class 2: ‘stability focused’ (31.1%)a | Class 3: ‘practicality focused’ (37.6%)a | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Utility (SE) | RI | Utility (SE) | RI | Utility (SE) | RI | ||
| Muscle damage | 1 of 10,000 | 0.60 (0.06)b | 40.6% | 0.44 (0.10)b | 11.7% | 0.72 (0.08)b | 20.0% |
| 3 of 10,000 | −0.60 (0.06)b | −0.44 (0.10)b | −0.72 (0.08)b | ||||
| Blood sampling twice | No | −0.06 (0.06) | 3.8% | 0.45 (0.09)b | 11.9% | 1.39 (0.10)b | 38.8% |
| Yes | 0.06 (0.06) | −0.45 (0.09)b | −1.39 (0.10)b | ||||
| Curing pneumonia without hospitalization | 95 of 100 | 0.61 (0.06)b | 41.4% | 0.43 (0.09)b | 11.3% | 0.32 (0.07)b | 8.8% |
| 90 of 100 | −0.61 (0.06)b | −0.43 (0.09)b | −0.32 (0.07)b | ||||
| Moderate muscle pain | 5 of 100 | 0.17 (0.06)b | 11.6% | 0.14 (0.09) | 3.8% | 0.26 (0.07)b | 7.1% |
| 10 of 100 | −0.17 (0.06)b | −0.14 (0.09) | −0.26 (0.07)b | ||||
| Switch of cardiovascular drug | No | 0.04 (0.06) | 2.5% | 2.31 (0.20)b | 61.2% | 0.90 (0.09)b | 25.2% |
| Yes | −0.04 (0.06) | −2.31 (0.20)b | −0.90 (0.09)b | ||||
RI relative importance, SE standard error
a Average class probability
b p < 0.05
| Risk–benefit assessments for drug–drug interaction management should incorporate the patient’s perspective. |
| Both patients and pharmacists have diverging preferences regarding drug–drug interaction management. |
| The development and application of drug interaction management recommendations can benefit from the awareness of existing variability of preferences. |