Abstract

Introduction: Drug interactions could account for 1% of hospitalizations in the general population and 2–5% of hospital admissions in the elderly. However, few data are available on the drugs concerned and the potential severity of the interactions encountered. We thus first aimed to estimate the prevalence of dispensings including drugs Contraindicated or Discommended because of Interactions (CDI codispensings) and to identify the most frequently involved drug pairs. Second, we aimed to investigate whether the frequency of CDI codispensings appeared higher or lower than the expected for the drugs involved.Methods: We carried out a study using a random sample of all drugs dispensings registered in a database of the French Health Insurance System between 2010 and 2015. The distribution of the drugs involved was described considering active principles, detailing the 20 most frequent ones for both contraindicated or discommended codispensings (DCs). To investigate whether the frequency of CDI codispensings appeared higher or lower than the expected for the drugs involved, we developed a specific indicator, the Drug-drug interaction prevalence study-score (DIPS-score), that compares for each drug pair the observed frequency of codispensing to its expected probability. The latter is determined considering the frequencies of dispensings of the individual drugs constituting a pair of interest.Results: We analyzed 6,908,910 dispensings: 13,196 (0.2%) involved contraindicated codispensings (CCs), and 95,410 (1.4%) DCs. For CCS, the most frequently involved drug pair was “bisoprolol+flecainide” (n = 5,036); four out of five of the most represented pairs involved cardiovascular drugs. For DCS, the most frequently involved drug pair was “ramipril+spironolactone” (n = 4,741); all of the five most represented pairs involved cardiovascular drugs. The drug pair involved in the CC with the highest score value was “citalopram+hydroxyzine” (DIPS-score: 3.7; 2.9–4.6); that with the lowest score was “clarithromycin+simvastatin” (DIPS-score: 0.2; 0.2–0.3). DIPS-score median value was 0.4 for CCs and 0.6 for DCs.Conclusion: This high prevalence of CDI codispensings enforces the need for further risk-prevention actions regarding drug-drug interactions (DDIs), especially for arrhythmogenic or anti-arrhythmic drugs. In this perspective, the DIPS-score we develop could ease identifying the interactions that are poorly considered by clinicians/pharmacists and targeting interventions.

Highlights

  • Drug interactions could account for 1% of hospitalizations in the general population and 2–5% of hospital admissions in the elderly

  • A total of 6,908,910 drug dispensings was observed over the study period; among these, 13,196 implied contraindicated codispensings (CCs) (0.2%; 95% Confidence Interval (95% CI): 0.2–0.2%) and 95,410 discommended codispensings (DCs) (1.4%; 95% CI: 1.4–1.4%)

  • The different drug pairs involved in CDI codispensings consisted of 254 drug pairs for CCs and 1,111 drug pairs for DCs

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Summary

Introduction

Drug interactions could account for 1% of hospitalizations in the general population and 2–5% of hospital admissions in the elderly. Polypharmacy is defined by the World Health Organization as “the administration of many drugs at the same time or the administration of an excessive number of drugs” and continuous polypharmacy is limited to medications taken for prolonged and regular periods (Fincke et al, 2005) As the latter is the most important risk factor for DDIs, it is likely that the populational exposure to the risk conveyed by these deleterious drug associations will rise in the future, except if dedicated interventions succeed to constrain it (Guthrie et al, 2015; Stoll and Kopittke, 2015). If the overall impact and health burden represented by DDIs is difficult to assess given the wide heterogeneity of the adverse events they can induce (Lopez-Gonzalez et al, 2009; Aronson, 2015), the populational exposure to the risk of DDIs can be estimated and characterized by identifying codispensings of drug pairs that are contraindicated or discommended, and by describing which of such drug pairs are frequently codispensed despite their concomitant use is advised against

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