Prevalence of drug-drug interactions in children with cardiac disorders receiving off-label drugs in a single centre in Pakistan: a cross-sectional study.
Anam Fatima, Muhammad Aamir, Naila Shahbaz, Shehla Akbar, Adeel Aslam, Kashif Barkat, Samia Afaq
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Abstract
Objectives: This study evaluated the prevalence of clinically significant drug-drug interactions (CSDDIs), off-label (OL) drug use and the associated predictors in paediatric cardiology ward.
Design: A cross-sectional study.
Setting: Hayatabad Medical Complex, Tertiary care hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan.
Patients: 250 patients.
Methodology: The Micromedex Drug-Reax tool was used to check the drug-drug interactions (DDI) and interactions of major severity were categorised as CSDDI. Association of various predictors including OL drug use with CSDDIs was evaluated using univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression.
Main outcome measures: Rate of drug-drug interactions, types and classification of DDI, OL prescribing in paediatrics.
Result: Of the total 250 paediatric patients, 127 (28.6%) patients were exposed to at least one clinically significant DDI, while 228 (91.20%) patients received at least one OL prescription. Furosemide was the most frequently prescribed drug involved in CSDDIs, while it was also one of the highly prescribed OL drugs. Multivariate analysis revealed that infant age group (OR 0.256; CI 0.080 to 0.814) with p value 0.02 and patients prescribed >5 drugs (OR 3.544; CI 1.906 to 6.589) were significantly more likely to experience CSDDIs in reference to their corresponding categories.
Conclusion: A high prevalence of CSDDIs and OL prescriptions was observed. OL drug presence was also observed to be a significant predictor associated with an increased risk of CSDDIs. Thus, to improve paediatric pharmacotherapy, suitable medical interventions are required to decrease OL drug use and CSDDIs.