Abstract

Children need a distinct medicines-use system designed explicitly for them since their continued inclusion in a system of prescription processing developed for adults generates insoluble risk points and workarounds. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), in its policy statement released by the AAP Committee on Drugs in early 2014 about off-label use in children, posits that federal legislation on increased drug testing in children has been effective, as “there have been over 500 pediatric-specific labeling changes.” However, the AAP’s position has not changed materially since the original 2002 policy statement. Indeed, other health professionals, their organizations, or affiliated practice-based research network (PBRNs) mechanisms continue to be excluded from consideration, collaboration, or even honorable mention. It is noteworthy that most of the 500 labeling changes made since 1997 have addressed the scientific validity of indications for medication use in pediatric population without regard to pharmacotherapy formulation or monitoring. Medication use in children continues to be associated with an unacceptably high rate of adverse events, morbidity, and death. Children should no longer be “shoehorned” into the adult medication-use system, which faces challenges in addressing even the adult population’s needs. The time is now to design a multi-phasic, systematic approach to the pharmacotherapy of children. This paper will argue for the establishment of a distinct medication use system for children, a trans-disciplinary system designed thoughtfully and intentionally, not by convention, consensus, or imitation.

Highlights

  • In February 2014, the Committee on Drugs of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)released a policy statement about the off-label drug use in children [1]

  • Regarding therapeutic decision-making, the Committee reinforced the idea that off-label use is “neither experimentation or research...and does not warrant special consent or review” [1]

  • AAP posits that federal legislation to increase drug testing in children has been effective because “there have been over 500 pediatric-specific labeling changes” [1]

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Summary

Introduction

In February 2014, the Committee on Drugs of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). Released a policy statement about the off-label drug use in children [1]. The Committee defined “off-label” use as “that [which] is not included in the package insert (governmentally-approved labeling) for that drug [1]. They further define the role of the United. We outline several issues not addressed in the AAP policy statement and illustrate how perpetuation of the current pharmacotherapy system used in pediatric population makes children needlessly vulnerable to drug-related morbidity and mortality. We argue for the establishment of a separate medication-use system designed not by convention or imitation but intentionally for children

Just How Safe is Medication Use in Children across the Continuum of Care?
Findings
Off-Label Drug Use—What Is It?
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