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临床试验/NCT04181775
NCT04181775
已完成
不适用

Effectiveness of an ADE-related Hospitalization Risk Prediction Tool for Patients Discharged From the Emergency Department (ADE-RED)

Methodist Health System1 个研究点 分布在 1 个国家目标入组 471 人2019年11月8日

概览

阶段
不适用
干预措施
未指定
疾病 / 适应症
Adverse Drug Event
发起方
Methodist Health System
入组人数
471
试验地点
1
主要终点
Incidences of ADE-related readmission within 30 days of prior ED visit.
状态
已完成
最后更新
上个月

概览

简要总结

The rationale for this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a risk prediction tool for patients who are at high risk for ADEs resulting in hospitalization or ED revisit. The ADE-RED score initiates a PLMR that literature has shown reduces medication discrepancies and ADEs at hospital admission and discharge. No current system identifies patients presenting to the ED that may benefit from PMLR independent of an admission disposition. The ADE-RED scoring tool will reduce the incidence of future visits to the ED or future admissions by identifying patients who are at high risk for ADE-related readmissions.

详细描述

There has been considerable attention placed on adverse drug events (ADEs) and their effects on readmission rates worldwide. Several studies have tried to identify the drugs most commonly responsible for ADEs, high-risk patient populations, and the causes of these ADEs. Some of the causes that have been postulated include the aging population, increasing number of drugs on the market, and a troubling upward trend in polypharmacy. The reported rates of ADE-related hospitalizations have varied from study to study. Kongkaew et al. estimated around 5% of all hospital admissions are the result of an adverse drug reaction (ADR), which is a subtype of ADEs. Meanwhile, Shehab et al. estimated approximately 27.3% of emergency department (ED) visits for ADEs result in hospitalization. Unfortunately, practitioners may exacerbate the problem by prescribing additional pharmacotherapy for conditions caused by an unrecognized ADE. Such circumstances can lead to additional cost and harm to patients. However, pharmacists are uniquely qualified to recognize and address potential ADEs through pharmacist-led medication reconciliation (PLMR). PLMR is the process in which a pharmacist produces an accurate list of medications a patient is taking and compares that list against the patient's documented admission, transfer, and/or discharge orders. Several years of education and training to learn the pharmacokinetic and pharmacokinetic characteristics of a wide variety of medications, as well as any potential side effects, have given pharmacists the skills to detect, assess, and understand ADEs. Many institutions have implemented PLMRs within specific hospital units, such as the ED, in an effort to increase cost savings to the patient and the health care institution. A meta-analysis of patients with preventable ADEs found that as much as 52% of ADEs, present at the time of hospitalization or an emergency visit, were preventable (8). This highlights the need to produce a tool to predict patients at risk for ADE-related hospitalizations. There have been several ADE risk prediction initiatives developed to identify high risk patients (9-17). Many of these risk prediction tools, such as the Prediction of Hospitalization due to ADRs in Elderly Community-Dwelling Patients (PADR-EC) score and the Brighton Adverse Drug Reactions Risk (BADRI) model, focused on older patients, hospitalized patients, or both. A focus on prediction tools in older adults is reasonable due to ADE-related hospitalization rates among adults 65 years or older, being seven times higher than adults younger than 65 years old (6). However, there is limited information in risk scoring tools for the general public who present to the ED and are at high risk of an ADE. In 2017, a Transitions of Care pharmacy resident at Methodist Dallas Medical Center (MDMC) developed a risk scoring tool to help identify patients in the ED who were at high risk for an ADE-related hospitalization. The scoring tool, which was named the ADE-RED score, took into account the patient's age, presence of polypharmacy, specific high- risk medications, number of previous ED visits, comorbidities, and the reason for their current visit. A score of 12 or more alerted ED pharmacists to perform a PLMR and to make necessary interventions and recommendations to medical staff. Therefore the ADE-RED program has the opportunity to fill a gap in the care for patients who may be hospitalized or return to the ED due to a preventable ADE. This study will be conducted to determine whether the ADE-RED score can reduce the incidence of ADE- related readmissions compared to the incidence of such readmissions as observed from sister facilities within the Methodist Health System (MHS) and to determine whether the ADE-RED score can predict patients at risk of readmission.

注册库
clinicaltrials.gov
开始日期
2019年11月8日
结束日期
2020年6月22日
最后更新
上个月
研究类型
Observational
性别
All

研究者

责任方
Sponsor

入排标准

入选标准

  • Patients admitted to the hospital with a prior ED visit within the previous 30 days
  • Patients presenting to the ED with a prior ED visit within the previous 30 days

排除标准

  • Patients without PTA medications at the time of initial ED presentation

结局指标

主要结局

Incidences of ADE-related readmission within 30 days of prior ED visit.

时间窗: one month period in March 2019

Incidences of ADE-related readmission within 30 days of prior ED visit.

次要结局

  • Percentage of patients who were readmitted who did or did not have an ADE-RED score at initial ED visit.(one month period in March 2019)

研究点 (1)

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