| Literature DB >> 32819359 |
Zahra Niazkhani1,2, Mahsa Fereidoni2,3, Parviz Rashidi Khazaee4, Afshin Shiva5, Khadijeh Makhdoomi1,6, Andrew Georgiou7, Habibollah Pirnejad8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Drug-laboratory (lab) interactions (DLIs) are a common source of preventable medication errors. Clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) are promising tools to decrease such errors by improving prescription quality in terms of lab values. However, alert fatigue counteracts their impact. We aimed to develop a novel user-friendly, evidence-based, clinical context-aware CDSS to alert nephrologists about DLIs clinically important lab values in prescriptions of kidney recipients.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical decision support systems; Drug-lab interactions; Kidney transplant; Medication errors; Patient safety
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32819359 PMCID: PMC7439664 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-020-01196-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Drug-lab interaction guidelines for a sample of our selected high-volume medications
| Medication a | ATC category and name b | Dose adjustment in renal impairment | Dose adjustment in hepatic impairment | Pregnancy considerations | Lab monitoring considerations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Allopurinol | M04: ANTIGOUT PREPARATIONS | • 10 ≤ CrCl < 20 ml/min/1.73m2: prescribe 200 mg/day per oral • 3 ≤ CrCl < 10 ml/min/1.73m2: prescribe 100 mg/day per oral • CrCl < 3 ml/min/1.73m2: prescribe 100 mg per oral every 24 h or longer; or 100 mg per oral every third day. | Dosage adjustment may be necessary; No specific recommendations available | – | Monitor Uric acid level: • If normal, check it every 6 months. • If abnormal, change Allopurinol dose accordingly |
| 2 | Azathioprine | L04: IMMUNOSUPPRESSANTS | • If renal impairment or oliguria exists, then dosage should be modified depending on clinical response and degree of renal impairment. No quantitative recommendations are available. | Specific guidelines for dosage adjustments in hepatic impairment are not available | Discontinue | – |
| 3 | Captopril | C09: AGENTS ACTING ON THE RENIN-ANGIOTENSIN SYSTEM | • 10 ≤ CrCl < 50 ml/min/1.73 m2: reduce the recommended dose by 25%. • CrCl < 10 ml/min/1.73 m2: reduce the recommended dose by 50%. | No adjustment is required | Discontinue | Monitor Na and K at the baseline and 1–2 weeks after the start. |
| 4 | Cyclosporine | L04: IMMUNOSUPPRESSANTS | No adjustment is required | • In hepatic impairment (ALT > 40 U/mL OR AST > 40 U/L OR Bili-total > 1.5 mg/dl): monitor Cyclosporine blood concentration level. May require dose reduction based on concentration. | – | Monitor Uric acid, K, and Mg levels every 2 weeks in the first 3 months then monthly |
| 5 | Hydrochlorothiazide | C03: DIURETICS | • CrCl < 30 ml/min/1.73 m2: do not use. | • In hepatic impairment (ALT > 40 U/mL OR AST > 40 U/L OR Bili-total > 1.5 mg/dl): use with caution, since minor alteration of fluid and electrolyte balance may precipitate hepatic coma. | – | Monitor K, Na and Cl |
| 6 | Losartan | C09: AGENTS ACTING ON THE RENIN-ANGIOTENSIN SYSTEM | • CrCl < 30 ml /min/1.73m2: If the patient is also volume-depleted, dose adjustment will be needed. | • In hepatic impairment (ALT > 40 U/mL OR AST > 40 U/L OR Bili-total > 1.5 mg/d): initiate with 25 mg per oral once daily. | Discontinue | Monitor Na and K at the baseline and 1–2 weeks after the start |
| 7 | Mycophenolat (mycophenolic acid) | L04: IMMUNOSUPPRESSANTS | • CrCl < 25 ml/min/1.73 m2: do not exceed 1 g per oral twice daily. | No adjustment is required | Discontinue | Monitor pregnancy test |
| 8 | Omeprazole | A02: DRUGS FOR ACID RELATED DISORDERS | No adjustment is required | • In severe hepatic disease (AST > 120 U/L OR ALT > 120 U/ml OR Bili-total > 3 mg/d) and cirrhotic liver disease: reduce Omeprazole dose to 10 mg once daily receiving for long-term therapy. | – | Monitor Mg and Vit B12 levels periodically |
Abbreviations: ATC-code Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical-code, CrCl Creatinine clearance, AST Aspartate aminotransferase, ALT Alanine aminotransferase, Bili Bilirubin, Mg Magnesium, P Phosphorus, K Potassium
aMedications are ordered alphabetically
bDrug categories are according to the WHO’s ATC standard
Fig. 1Study flow for designing the DLI-CDSS
Fig. 2A summary decision rules embedded in the DLI-CDSS
Fig. 3Two screenshots of the DLI-CDSS for a test patient with renal and hepatic impairments
Fig. 4Decision workflow embedded in the DLI-CDSS
Characteristics of 100 real patients whose data was used to validate the CDSS system
| Characteristics | No. of patients (equals to %) |
|---|---|
| Male gender | 56 |
| Age (year) | |
| Mean | 47.44 |
| Range | 20 to 73 |
| Weight (kilogram) | |
| Mean | 72.07 |
| Range | 45 to 135 |
| Immunosuppressive medications | |
| Mycophenolate | 74 |
| Cyclosporine | 71 |
| Sirolimus | 23 |
| Non-immunosuppressive medications | |
| Diltiazem | 51 |
| Calcium | 50 |
| Omeprazole | 39 |
| Losartan | 34 |
| Atorvastatin | 27 |
| Lab tests (Mean ± standard deviation) | |
| Cr | 1.57 ± 0.66 |
| AST | 19.64 ± 8.16 |
| ALT | 21.14 ± 13.24 |
Abbreviations: Cr Creatinine, AST Aspartate aminotransferase, ALT Alanine aminotransferase