A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease

Abstract Background People with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have high levels of co-morbidity and polypharmacy placing them at increased risk of prescribing-related harm. Tools for assessing prescribing safety in the general population using prescribing safety indicators (PSIs) have been established...

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Main Authors: Fiona Smith, Samantha Hayward, Barnaby Hole, George Kimpton, Christine Sluman, Penny Whiting, Fergus Caskey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:BMC Nephrology
Subjects:
CKD
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12882-020-02158-0
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spelling doaj-80840208720a47d893f55b3f5340ead82020-11-25T04:03:17ZengBMCBMC Nephrology1471-23692020-11-012111710.1186/s12882-020-02158-0A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney diseaseFiona Smith0Samantha Hayward1Barnaby Hole2George Kimpton3Christine Sluman4Penny Whiting5Fergus Caskey6North Bristol NHS TrustNorth Bristol NHS TrustNorth Bristol NHS TrustNorth Bristol NHS TrustNorth Bristol NHS TrustUniversity of BristolNorth Bristol NHS TrustAbstract Background People with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have high levels of co-morbidity and polypharmacy placing them at increased risk of prescribing-related harm. Tools for assessing prescribing safety in the general population using prescribing safety indicators (PSIs) have been established. However, people with CKD pose different prescribing challenges to people without kidney disease. Therefore, PSIs designed for use in the general population may not include all PSIs relevant to a CKD population. The aim of this study was to systematically collate a library of PSIs relevant to people with CKD. Methods A systematic literature search identified papers reporting PSIs. CKD-specific PSIs were extracted and categorised by Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification codes. Duplicate PSIs were removed to create a final list of CKD-specific PSIs. Results Nine thousand, eight hundred fifty-two papers were identified by the systematic literature search, of which 511 proceeded to full text screening and 196 papers were identified as reporting PSIs. Following categorisation by ATC code and duplicate removal, 841 unique PSIs formed the final set of CKD-specific PSIs. The five ATC drug classes containing the largest proportion of CKD-specific PSIs were: Cardiovascular system (26%); Nervous system (13.4%); Blood and blood forming organs (12.4%); Alimentary and metabolism (12%); and Anti-infectives for systemic use (11.3%). Conclusion CKD-specific PSIs could be used alone or alongside general PSIs to assess the safety and quality of prescribing within a CKD population.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12882-020-02158-0Chronic kidney diseaseCKDPrimary care populationOutpatient settingPrescribing safetyPotentially inappropriate prescribing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fiona Smith
Samantha Hayward
Barnaby Hole
George Kimpton
Christine Sluman
Penny Whiting
Fergus Caskey
spellingShingle Fiona Smith
Samantha Hayward
Barnaby Hole
George Kimpton
Christine Sluman
Penny Whiting
Fergus Caskey
A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease
BMC Nephrology
Chronic kidney disease
CKD
Primary care population
Outpatient setting
Prescribing safety
Potentially inappropriate prescribing
author_facet Fiona Smith
Samantha Hayward
Barnaby Hole
George Kimpton
Christine Sluman
Penny Whiting
Fergus Caskey
author_sort Fiona Smith
title A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease
title_short A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease
title_full A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease
title_fullStr A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease
title_full_unstemmed A systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease
title_sort systematically collated library of prescribing safety indicators for people with chronic kidney disease
publisher BMC
series BMC Nephrology
issn 1471-2369
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background People with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have high levels of co-morbidity and polypharmacy placing them at increased risk of prescribing-related harm. Tools for assessing prescribing safety in the general population using prescribing safety indicators (PSIs) have been established. However, people with CKD pose different prescribing challenges to people without kidney disease. Therefore, PSIs designed for use in the general population may not include all PSIs relevant to a CKD population. The aim of this study was to systematically collate a library of PSIs relevant to people with CKD. Methods A systematic literature search identified papers reporting PSIs. CKD-specific PSIs were extracted and categorised by Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification codes. Duplicate PSIs were removed to create a final list of CKD-specific PSIs. Results Nine thousand, eight hundred fifty-two papers were identified by the systematic literature search, of which 511 proceeded to full text screening and 196 papers were identified as reporting PSIs. Following categorisation by ATC code and duplicate removal, 841 unique PSIs formed the final set of CKD-specific PSIs. The five ATC drug classes containing the largest proportion of CKD-specific PSIs were: Cardiovascular system (26%); Nervous system (13.4%); Blood and blood forming organs (12.4%); Alimentary and metabolism (12%); and Anti-infectives for systemic use (11.3%). Conclusion CKD-specific PSIs could be used alone or alongside general PSIs to assess the safety and quality of prescribing within a CKD population.
topic Chronic kidney disease
CKD
Primary care population
Outpatient setting
Prescribing safety
Potentially inappropriate prescribing
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12882-020-02158-0
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