Abstract
BackgroundMedication problems such as strong side effects or inefficacy occur frequently. At our university hospital, a consultation group of specialists takes care of patients suffering from medication problems. Nevertheless, the counselling of poly-treated patients is complex, as it requires the consideration of a large network of interactions between drugs and their targets, their metabolizing enzymes, and their transporters, etc.PurposeThis study aims to check whether a score-based decision-support system (1) reduces the time and effort and (2) suggests solutions at the same quality level.Patients and methodsA total of 200 multimorbid, poly-treated patients with medication problems were included. All patients were considered twice: manually, as clinically established, and using the Drug-PIN decision-support system. Besides diagnoses, lab data (kidney, liver), phenotype (age, gender, BMI, habits), and genotype (genetic variants with actionable clinical evidence I or IIa) were considered, to eliminate potentially inappropriate medications and to select individually favourable drugs from existing medication classes. The algorithm is connected to automatically updated knowledge resources to provide reproducible up-to-date decision support.ResultsThe average turnaround time for manual poly-therapy counselling per patient ranges from 3 to 6 working hours, while it can be reduced to ten minutes using Drug-PIN. At the same time, the results of the novel computerized approach coincide with the manual approach at a level of > 90%. The holistic medication score can be used to find favourable drugs within a class of drugs and also to judge the severity of medication problems, to identify critical cases early and automatically.ConclusionWith the computerized version of this approach, it became possible to score all combinations of all alternative drugs from each class of drugs administered (“personalized medication landscape “) and to identify critical patients even before problems are reported (“medication alert”). Careful comparison of manual and score-based results shows that the incomplete manual consideration of genetic specialties and pharmacokinetic conflicts is responsible for most of the (minor) deviations between the two approaches. The meaning of the reduction of working time for experts by about 2 orders of magnitude should not be underestimated, as it enables practical application of personalized medicine in clinical routine.
Highlights
Improper drug prescription has been recognized as the main societal challenge by The World Health Organization (WHO), and the Third WHO Global Patient Safety Challenge was launched in 2017 [1]
The second dimension deals with drug-drug interactions (DDIs), which may lead to counterproductive consequences or an decrease in the beneficial effects of the given drugs [6]
Regarding poly-treated patients, the occurrence of severe DDIs ranged from 31.8% in patients taking 6 drugs to more than 60% in patients taking 10 or more drugs (Table 2)
Summary
Improper drug prescription has been recognized as the main societal challenge by The World Health Organization (WHO), and the Third WHO Global Patient Safety Challenge was launched in 2017 [1]. The phenotype of the patient, which is effected by age, sex, pattern of comorbidities, habits (e.g., nicotine or alcohol abuse), and physiological features, like liver and kidney function constitutes the third dimension [2]. The consideration of this “personal interaction network” (Drug-PIN) is required to optimize the drug therapy. Medication problems such as strong side effects or inefficacy occur frequently. Results The average turnaround time for manual poly-therapy counselling per patient ranges from 3 to 6 working hours, while it can be reduced to ten minutes using Drug-PIN. The meaning of the reduction of working time for experts by about 2 orders of magnitude should not be underestimated, as it enables practical application of personalized medicine in clinical routine
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.