| Literature DB >> 33941259 |
L C Hendriksen1,2, P D van der Linden2, A L M Lagro-Janssen3, P M L A van den Bemt4, S J Siiskonen5,6, M Teichert7, J G Kuiper8, R M C Herings8,9, B H Stricker1, L E Visser10,11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adverse drug events, including adverse drug reactions (ADRs), are responsible for approximately 5% of unplanned hospital admissions: a major health concern. Women are 1.5-1.7 times more likely to develop ADRs. The main objective was to identify sex differences in the types and number of ADRs leading to hospital admission.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse drug reactions; Hospital admissions; Pharmacoepidemiology; Sex differences
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33941259 PMCID: PMC8091530 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-021-00377-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Age distribution of women and men with ADR-associated hospital admissions between the 1st of January 2005 up to the 31st of December 2017
| Women (18,469) | Men (14,678) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age, years (SD) | 72.1 (15.5) | 71.3 (13.1) | |
| Age categories, years, | 16–55 | 2666 (14.4) | 1650 (11.2) |
| 56–65 | 2460 (13.3) | 2459 (16.8) | |
| 66–75 | 3886 (21.0) | 4183 (28.5) | |
| 76–85 | 6070 (32.9) | 4823 (32.9) | |
| > 85 | 3387 (18.3) | 1563 (10.6) | |
Fig. 1The percentage of ADR-related hospital admissions of the total number of hospital admissions. In total, there were 5,323,990 women and 4,251,957 men admitted
Fig. 2The number of ADR-related hospital admissions of women and men per drug group. These groups are the ten most frequently responsible drug groups causing hospital admissions
Fig. 3The percentage of ADR-related hospital admissions in women and men. The percentage is relative to the number of female and male users
The 10 most frequent ADRs responsible for hospital admissions for women and men
| Adverse drug reaction | Total admissions ( | Women ( | Women (% of total female admissions) | Men ( | Men (% of total male admissions) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Constipation | 788 | 471 | 0.009 | 317 | 0.007 |
| Hypo-osmolality and hyponatraemia | 751 | 597 | 0.011 | 154 | 0.004 |
| Haemorrhage, not elsewhere classified | 650 | 365 | 0.007 | 285 | 0.007 |
| Urinary tract infection, site not specified | 625 | 422 | 0.008 | 203 | 0.005 |
| Gastrointestinal haemorrhage, unspecified | 606 | 290 | 0.005 | 316 | 0.007 |
| Nausea and vomiting | 575 | 392 | 0.007 | 183 | 0.004 |
| Syncope and collapse | 572 | 297 | 0.006 | 275 | 0.006 |
| Pneumonia, unspecified | 504 | 238 | 0.004 | 266 | 0.006 |
| Drug-induced fever | 492 | 264 | 0.005 | 228 | 0.005 |
| Heart failure, unspecified | 434 | 233 | 0.004 | 201 | 0.005 |
Fig. 4In total, 18,469 women (n) and 14,678 men (n) had an ADR-associated admission. This was 0.35% of the total number of admitted women (N = 5,323,990) and 0.35% of the total number of admitted men (N = 4,251,957). This figure shows the age-adjusted odds ratios (ORadj) for women versus men for drug-ADR combinations. All combinations with at least 50 admissions in either women or men are presented. ORs with a p value < 0.05 are statistically significant and labelled with the corresponding ADR [see Additional file 3 for all values]