Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysis
Introduction: Drug-drug interactions are an important clinical problem in pharmacotherapy. This study is focused on different types of drugs used in a psychiatric hospital. Materials and methods: The pharmacoepidemiological study included the analysis...
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2019-12-01
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doaj-1c3d7502a9884cb0803f189e8428aa382021-05-21T15:15:35ZengPensoft PublishersResearch Results in Pharmacology2658-381X2019-12-01541610.3897/rrpharmacology.5.3968139681Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysisOleg O. Kirilochev0Inna P. Dorfman1Adelya R. Umerova2Svetlana E. Bataeva3Astrakhan State Medical UniversityAstrakhan State Medical UniversityAstrakhan State Medical UniversityAstrakhan State Medical University Introduction: Drug-drug interactions are an important clinical problem in pharmacotherapy. This study is focused on different types of drugs used in a psychiatric hospital. Materials and methods: The pharmacoepidemiological study included the analysis of medical records of 500 psychiatric inpatients. The patients were divided into 2 groups: under 65 and over 65 years of age. All the drug prescriptions were analyzed to identify the combinations of drugs that can induce drug-drug interactions and determine their clinical significance. Results and discussion: Over 77% of hospitalized patients were administered drug combinations that could induce drug-drug interactions, most of which were of moderate clinical significance. A reliable association was found between the patient’s age, the clinical significance of drug-drug interactions, and the pharmacotherapy structure. The most common irrational drug combinations were identified. Conclusion: Timely analysis of drug prescriptions for potential drug-drug interactions can enhance the safety of pharmacotherapy and decrease the risk of adverse drug reactions in the psychiatric inpatient setting. https://rrpharmacology.pensoft.net/article/39681/download/pdf/ |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Oleg O. Kirilochev Inna P. Dorfman Adelya R. Umerova Svetlana E. Bataeva |
spellingShingle |
Oleg O. Kirilochev Inna P. Dorfman Adelya R. Umerova Svetlana E. Bataeva Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysis Research Results in Pharmacology |
author_facet |
Oleg O. Kirilochev Inna P. Dorfman Adelya R. Umerova Svetlana E. Bataeva |
author_sort |
Oleg O. Kirilochev |
title |
Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysis |
title_short |
Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysis |
title_full |
Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysis |
title_fullStr |
Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: Frequency analysis |
title_sort |
potential drug-drug interactions in the psychiatric hospital: frequency analysis |
publisher |
Pensoft Publishers |
series |
Research Results in Pharmacology |
issn |
2658-381X |
publishDate |
2019-12-01 |
description |
Introduction: Drug-drug interactions are an important clinical problem in pharmacotherapy. This study is focused on different types of drugs used in a psychiatric hospital.
Materials and methods: The pharmacoepidemiological study included the analysis of medical records of 500 psychiatric inpatients. The patients were divided into 2 groups: under 65 and over 65 years of age. All the drug prescriptions were analyzed to identify the combinations of drugs that can induce drug-drug interactions and determine their clinical significance.
Results and discussion: Over 77% of hospitalized patients were administered drug combinations that could induce drug-drug interactions, most of which were of moderate clinical significance. A reliable association was found between the patient’s age, the clinical significance of drug-drug interactions, and the pharmacotherapy structure. The most common irrational drug combinations were identified.
Conclusion: Timely analysis of drug prescriptions for potential drug-drug interactions can enhance the safety of pharmacotherapy and decrease the risk of adverse drug reactions in the psychiatric inpatient setting.
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url |
https://rrpharmacology.pensoft.net/article/39681/download/pdf/ |
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