Title: Adverse Drug Reactions
1Adverse Drug Reactions
- Jerrold H. Levy, MD
- Professor of Anesthesiology
- Emory University School of Medicine
- Director of Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology
- Emory Healthcare
- Atlanta, Georgia
2Introduction
- Any drug can cause an ADR
- Perioperatively, multiple agents are administered
- Occult antigens pose major problems (ie, latex,
additives) - Fatal ADRs leading cause of death
- ADR costs may lead to an additional 1.56-4
billion/yr in US
3Incidence of Reactions
- 5 adults in US are allergic to
- gt1 drugs
- 30 of medical inpatients develop an ADR
- 3 of all hospital admissions are due to ADRs
- Risk of an allergic reaction is approximately
1-3 for most drugs
4WHO Definition of ADRs
- Any noxious, unintended, undesired effect of a
drug which occurs at doses used for prophylaxis,
diagnosis, or therapy, excluding therapeutic
failures, intentional and accidental overdose and
drug abuse, and does not include AEs due to
errors in drug administration.
5PREDICTABLE REACTIONS
- Dose dependent
- Related to drugs actions
- Occur in normal patients
- 80 of adverse effects
6PREDICTABLE REACTIONS
- Overdosage or toxicity
- Side effects
- Secondary/Indirect effects
- Drug interactions
7UNPREDICTABLE REACTIONS
- Dose-independent
- Not related to drugs actions
- Related to immune response (allergy)
8Safety and Pharmaceutical Agents
- Safety and efficacy must be shown for a drug to
be FDA approved - Costs also drive considerations of how drugs are
used in clinical practice or approved by
regulatory agencies - Generic drugs can be approved without rigorous
testing required of new drugs tested in clinical
studies
9Safety and Pharmaceutical Agents (2)
- Costs also determine the use of pharmaceutical
agents. - Clinicians may accept the lack of safety data
when one agent is significantly cheaper to use. - Safety data incurs significant costs
- Significant costs are associated with severe ADRs
when they occur
10ADR Prevention Study (JAMA 199527429,35, NEJM
1991324377)
- Rate of ADRs 6.5/100 admissions
- 28 ADRs were preventable and serious
- ADRs increase LOS 1.9 days and increase hospital
costs 1939 (not including costs of injuries) - The annual national cost of drug-related MM is
enormous
11Costs associated with ADRs (JAMA 1997 277
307-311)
- Prospective study to compare LOS and total
charges - 247 ADRs in 204 patients
- 57 significant, 30 serious, 12
life-threatening, and 1 fatal - Nonpreventable ADRs analgesics (30),
antibiotics (30), oncologic agents (8), and
sedatives (7)
12Costs associated with ADRs (JAMA 1997 277
307-311) (2)
- The largest preventable ADRs were caused by
analgesics (29), sedatives (10), antibiotics
(9), and antipsychotics (7) - Allergic complications occurred in 7 of
patients, and cardiovascular complications in 16
13Costs associated with ADRs (JAMA 1997 277
307-311) (3)
- An ADR was associated with 2,595 of additional
costs not including the costs of injuries - Annual ADR costs for the two Harvard hospitals
5.6 million - Estimated preventable ADR costs are in the
billions
14Detecting ADRs
- Clinical trials often do not include certain
patient populations where the drug may be
potentially used, including pregnant women or
children, although recently the FDA has
encouraged companies to study these patient
populations by extending patent time
15Detecting ADRs (2)
- Premarketing trials frequently do not have
sufficient power to reliably detect important
ADRs, which may occur at rates of 1 in 10,000 or
fewer drug exposures - FDA drug approval does not exclude the
possibility of rare but serious ADRs
16ADR detection methods
- Premarketing clinical trials
- Post approval spontaneous case reports
- Aggregate population-based data sources
- Computerized data collections
- Postmarketing studies
- Case reports
17Case Reports
- One of the methods to detect the potential for a
pharmacologic agent to produce serious ADRs have
been noted first in case reports. Unusual or rare
events that occur during initial drug use are
more likely to be detected by case reports (JAMA
1999281824)
18FDA Reporting Mechanisms MEDWATCH
- To improve the detection of previously unknown
serious ADRs and knowledge about regulatory
actions taken in response to reporting of these
events, FDA introduced MEDWATCH in 1993
19FDA Reporting Mechanisms MEDWATCH (2)
- FDA encourages health professionals to monitor
for and report serious adverse events and product
problems to FDA
20MedWatch Program (3)
- MedWatch is designed to educate health
professionals about the critical importance of
being aware of, monitoring for, and reporting
adverse events and problems to FDA
21MedWatch Program (4)
- Designed to enhance the effectiveness of
postmarketing surveillance of medical products as
they are used in clinical practice and to rapidly
identify significant health hazards associated
with these products.
22MedWatch Program (5)
- To increase awareness of drug and device-induced
disease - To clarify what should (and should not) be
reported to the agency - To facilitate reporting by operating a single
system for health professionals to report AEs and
product problems - To provide regular feedback to the health care
community about safety issues involving medical
products
23Incidence and risk of perioperative anaphylactic
reactions
- 1 in 2,500-5,000 patients
- Incidence of perioperative anaphylactic reactions
has been suggested to be increasing - Most of the information in the US is from case
reports and, to a lesser extent, retrospective
studies
24Risk of Anaphylaxis (1)
- Even if the risk of an anaphylactic reaction is
small, if the drug is administered to millions,
the actual number of reactions is important to
consider. This is important for latex sensitive
pts, or as we examine new pharmacologic or
different preparations of drugs that are
introduced into practice.
25Risk of Anaphylaxis (2)
- Propofol was first solubilized in Cremophor, a
solvent with a known risk of ADRs changed to
intralipid - Generic form of propofol contains a sulfiting
agent not tested in clinical trials - Clinical manifestations of true allergic
reactions often may be mistakenly attributed to
predictable ADRs and may often go unreported
26Risk of Anaphylaxis (3)
- Anesthetic agents including propofol cause
hypotension and dose-related vasodilation by
direct and indirect mechanisms - Bronchospasm may occur during laryngoscopy and
intubation under light planes of anesthesia - Clinicians may confuse true allergic reactions
with known drug effects
27Agents most often implicated in perioperative
anaphylaxis
- Antibiotics
- Blood products
- Drug additives/preservatives
- Muscle relaxants
- Proteins (latex and protamine)
28Antibiotics
- Penicillin and cephalosporins
- Vancomycin
29Blood Products
- Whole blood, RBCs
- Platelets
- FFP, cryoprecipitate
- Immunoglobulins
- Fibrin glue
30Drug Additives/Preservatives
- Includes sulfites and parabens, used as
preservatives in parenteral solutions - Additives/preservatives that may be included in
IV drugs should be considered in the etiology of
occult anaphylaxis
31Drug Additives/Preservatives(2)
- In allergic patients who ingest sulfites, gastric
pH generates sulfur dioxide producing
bronchospasm, coughing, or asthma - The problem we face as clinicians is a lack of
data on the incidence and risk of
hypersensitivity reactions to intravenous sulfites
32Drug Additives/Preservatives (3)
- Patients with multiple drug allergies and those
with reactive airway disease are potentially at a
greater risk for an allergic response to
sulfite-containing solutions
33Risk factors for Latex Allergy
- Allergy to bananas, avocados, kiwis, mangos
- Healthcare workers
- Children with urogenital abnormalities, spina
bifida
34Latex Allergy in Anesthesiologists
- 24 incidence irritant/contact dermatitis
- 12.5 incidence of latex-specific anti-IgE
- 10 were clinically asymptomatic although IgE
positive - Brown RH Anesthesiology 199889287
35Latex Allergy in Anesthesiologists
- Atopy was a risk factor for sensitization
- Brown suggests by avoiding latex exposure,
progression to symptomatic disease may be
prevented - Brown RH Anesthesiology 199889287
36Protamine
- Isolated from salmon sperm
- Complex set of ADRs
- 0.6-2 reactions in NPH diabetics
- Multiple mechanisms for reactions
37Management of the Allergic Patient
- Greater risk of anaphylaxis in pts with an
allergic history or atopy receiving an iv
anesthetic - 46 pt with anaphylaxis had a history of allergy
or atopy (LaForest) - 44.4 atopy in pt with anaphylaxis (compared to
5- 22) (Moscicki)
38SUMMARY
- Any drug can produce some form of ADR
- Significant untoward risks, costs, and increased
hospital stays associated with ADRs - Allergy, atopy, or asthma pts have been suggested
to be at an increased risk
39SUMMARY (2)
- Antibiotics, blood products, drug preservatives
(sulfites and methylparabens) and polypeptides
(ie, aprotinin, latex, and protamine) may be
associated with a higher incidence of reactions - Drug avoidance whenever possible is still the
best method to avoid an ADR
40adversereactions.com