Home J Young Pharm, Vol 10/Issue 4/2018 Incidence of Drug-Drug Interactions among Patients Admitted to the Department of General Medicine in a Tertiary Care Hospital

Incidence of Drug-Drug Interactions among Patients Admitted to the Department of General Medicine in a Tertiary Care Hospital

by [email protected]
Published on:October 2018
Journal of Young Pharmacists, 2018; 10(4):450-455
Original Article | doi:10.5530/jyp.2018.10.98
Authors:

Namrata Bajracharya, Ann Mary Swaroop, Saraswathy Ganesan Rajalekshmi*, Subeesh K Viswam, Maheswari E

Department of Pharmacy Practice, Faculty of Pharmacy, M.S. Ramaiah University of Applied Sciences, Bangalore, Karnataka, INDIA.

Abstract:

Background: Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs) contribute to increased rate of morbidity and mortality increasing the need for intense monitoring of patient safety which can be achieved by detecting and preventing morbidities associated with DDIs. Objective and Methodology: The present work was a prospective study carried out for a period of six months, to assess the incidence of DDIs in patients admitted to the Department of General Medicine at a tertiary care hospital. Results: Prescriptions of 411 patients were analysed, out of which 165 (40.15%) prescriptions were identified with potential DDIs whereas clinical manifestations of actual DDIs were observed and reported in 23 (5.6%). A total of 657 DDIs were observed of which 6 (0.9%), 240 (36.5%), 374 (56.9%) and 33 (5.6%) were of contraindicated, major, moderate and minor severity respectively. Based on the mechanism 310 (47.2%) of the identified DDIs were pharmacodynamic and 243 (36.9%) were pharmacokinetic interactions. There was a positive correlation between the number of DDIs and risk factors such as length of hospital stay, number of drugs prescribed and co-morbidities. Conclusion: This study concludes that awareness on the most prevalent DDIs can help the practitioners to prescribe drugs with a low risk for DDIs and prevent the concomitant use of dangerous drug combinations.

Key words: Drug-drug interactions, General medicine, Pharmacodynamic, Pharmacokinetic, Severity, Risk factors.