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Old 04-27-2015, 10:32 AM   #210
gemy
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ladyjane View Post
OK....Gemy said it was 15 - 20% ... this says 5 - 10%. Big difference. I was just wondering where she got her figures.

I just scanned this and will try to concentrate on it later on today. It is an interesting topic.

Thanks, Phil!

Sorry Linda playing catch up here. Here is one quick search that yielded the following:


Keywords:

drug interaction;
adverse drug reaction;
hospital admissions;
hospital visits;
pharmacoepidemiology

ABSTRACT

Purpose

To estimate prevalences of hospital admissions/visits associated with actual drug–drug interactions (DDIs) and examine the effect of study design (prospective vs. retrospective), population (all ages or adults), and method of detecting DDIs on reported prevalences.


Methods

PubMed, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts, Excerpta Medica Database, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature plus, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews up to October 2013 were searched for observational studies examining actual DDIs, in any language. The outcomes in this study were DDI prevalence rates in total populations, DDI prevalence rates in total adverse drug reaction patients, and frequency (%) of each pair of DDIs.


Results

Thirteen studies met our inclusion criteria. The median DDI prevalence rate for hospital admissions was 1.1% (367 DDI cases/47 976 patients, interquartile range [IQR] 0.4–2.4%). The median DDI prevalence rate for hospital visits was 0.1% (20 DDI cases/23 607 patients, IQR 0.0–0.3%). In adverse drug reaction patients, the median DDI prevalence rate for hospital admissions (308 DDI cases/1683 patients) and hospital visits (8 DDI cases/90 patients) were 22.2% (IQR 16.6–36.0%) and 8.9%, respectively. Medical record, interview, drug interaction screening program, adverse reaction report, and electronic medical record were identified as methods used for detecting DDIs. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were most commonly involved in hospital admission associated DDIs, whereas warfarin was frequently involved in DDIs detected at hospital visits as outpatients/emergencies.


Conclusions

Drug–drug interactions are a significant cause of hospital admissions and hospital visits. Improved DDI information gathering could help to reduce such adverse effects from DDIs, especially for patients using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and warfarin. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Hospital admissions/visits associated with drug–drug interactions: a systematic review and meta-analysis - Dechanont - 2014 - Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety - Wiley Online Library source


In further elaboration the general stats I quoted were likely sourced from med articles that I read which referenced human research/stats as I was reviewing canine research.


The above literature does not pinpoint single drug as my time frees up I will try to search out some literature for you.
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