Pharmaceuticals (Jan 2024)

Improving Drug Safety in Pediatric and Young Adult Patients with Hemato-Oncological Diseases: A Prospective Study of Active Pharmacovigilance

  • Anna Parzianello,
  • Giulia Fornasier,
  • Valentina Kiren,
  • Federico Pigato,
  • Sabrina Orzetti,
  • Giulia Zamagni,
  • Anna Arbo,
  • Paolo Baldo,
  • Paola Rossi,
  • Marco Rabusin,
  • Maurizio Mascarin,
  • Marta Paulina Trojniak

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ph17010106
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
p. 106

Abstract

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The acquisition of relevant pediatric clinical safety data is essential to ensure tolerable drug therapies. Comparing the real number of Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) reports in clinical practice with the literature, the idea of ADR underreporting emerges. An active pharmacovigilance observational prospective study was conducted to assess the safety of oncology pharmacological prescriptions in patients aged 0–24 years at Institute for Maternal and Child Health IRCCS Burlo Garofolo in Trieste and IRCCS CRO National Cancer Institute in Aviano (Italy) between January 2021 and October 2023. Prescriptions and ADRs were evaluated by a multidisciplinary team. A total of 1218 prescriptions for 38 patients were analyzed, and 190 ADRs of grade 3–5 were collected. As compared to historical data, we registered a significant increase (p p-value = 0.004). The risks of error and near-miss were reported for 6.3% and 18.2% of total prescriptions, respectively. Of the total of 133 interactions, 47 (35.3%) resulted in ADRs. This study shows the importance of pro-active pharmacovigilance to efficiently highlight ADRs, and the fundamental role of multidisciplinary teams (oncologist, pharmacist, pharmacologist, pediatrician, nurse) in improving patients’ safety during therapy.

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