BMC Pediatrics (Apr 2019)

Drug related problems in the neonatal intensive care unit: incidence, characterization and clinical relevance

  • Ramon Duarte Leopoldino,
  • Marco Tavares Santos,
  • Tatiana Xavier Costa,
  • Rand Randall Martins,
  • António Gouveia Oliveira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-019-1499-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Any event involving drug therapy that may interfere in a patient’s desired clinical outcome is called a drug related problem (DRP). DRP are very common in intensive therapy, however, little is known about DRP in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of DRPs in NICU patients and to characterize DRPs according to type, cause and corresponding pharmaceutical conducts. Methods Prospective observational study conducted in the NICU at a teaching hospital in Brazil from January 2014 to November 2016. The data were collected from the records of the clinical pharmacy service, excluding neonates admitted for less than 24 h and those who had no drugs prescribed. DRPs were classified according to the Pharmaceutical Care Network Europe system and evaluated for relevance-safety. Results Six hundred neonates were included in the study, with mean gestational age of 31.9 ± 4.1 weeks and mean birth weight of 1779 ± 885 g. The incidence of DRPs in the NICU was 6.8% patient-days (95%CI 6.2–7.3%) and affected 59.8% of neonates (95% CI 55.8–63.8%). Sub-optimal effect (52.8%) and inappropriate dose selection (39.75%) were the most common problem and cause, respectively. Anti-infectives was the medication class most involved in DRPs. More than one-third of neonates were exposed to DRP of significant or high safety-relevance. Most of the pharmaceutical interventions were related with drug prescription, with over 90% acceptance by attending physicians. Conclusion DRP are common in NICU, predominating problems of sub-optimal treatment, mainly due to inappropriate dose selection.

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