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A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily

Children represent one of the most susceptible groups to adverse drug reactions (ADRs), as a consequence of physiological growth and maturation of different organ systems. The aim of this study was to characterize the frequency, preventability and seriousness of ADRs recorded in the Pediatric Emerge...

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Autores principales: Nasso, Chiara, Mecchio, Anna, Rottura, Michelangelo, Valenzise, Mariella, Menniti-Ippolito, Francesca, Cutroneo, Paola Maria, Squadrito, Violetta, Squadrito, Francesco, Pallio, Giovanni, Irrera, Natasha, Arcoraci, Vincenzo, Altavilla, Domenica
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7379477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32765282
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2020.01090
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author Nasso, Chiara
Mecchio, Anna
Rottura, Michelangelo
Valenzise, Mariella
Menniti-Ippolito, Francesca
Cutroneo, Paola Maria
Squadrito, Violetta
Squadrito, Francesco
Pallio, Giovanni
Irrera, Natasha
Arcoraci, Vincenzo
Altavilla, Domenica
author_facet Nasso, Chiara
Mecchio, Anna
Rottura, Michelangelo
Valenzise, Mariella
Menniti-Ippolito, Francesca
Cutroneo, Paola Maria
Squadrito, Violetta
Squadrito, Francesco
Pallio, Giovanni
Irrera, Natasha
Arcoraci, Vincenzo
Altavilla, Domenica
author_sort Nasso, Chiara
collection PubMed
description Children represent one of the most susceptible groups to adverse drug reactions (ADRs), as a consequence of physiological growth and maturation of different organ systems. The aim of this study was to characterize the frequency, preventability and seriousness of ADRs recorded in the Pediatric Emergency Department (ED) of the University hospital of Messina, in Sicily. All the suspected adverse reactions to drugs and vaccines collected from 2012 to 2018 were selected and then analyzed. Only adverse drug reactions (ADRs) with a probable or possible causality assessment were included, according to the Naranjo Algorithm and the World Health Organization criteria; the preventability assessment using Schumock and Thornton criteria was also carried out. The Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA) was used to group ADRs. Of 75,935 admissions to the Pediatric ED, 120 were due to suspected ADRs. The rate of hospital admission due to ADRs (75.8%) was significantly greater than that of patients without ADRs (11.9%). Among pediatric patients with ADRs the median (Q1–Q3) age was 29.5 (12–73.25) months. Most of ADRs were observed in infants and children (43.3% and 41.7%, respectively vs adolescents, 15%). In addition, in children with ADRs, females [41 (14–105)] were older than males [23 (11–45)] (p=0.044). Most adverse reactions were serious (75.8%) and 20.8% were preventable or probably preventable; however, the majority of serious ADRs (93.4%) resulted without sequelae. The reactions were found to be as probable (54.2%) or possible (45.8%). Vaccines (n=63), antibacterials (n=31) and anti-inflammatory medicines (n=14) were the most frequently drugs involved. Organ toxicity mapping due to vaccines was general disorders and administration site conditions (65.1%), nervous disorders (50.2%), cutaneous disorders (35%), followed by gastrointestinal disorders (20.6%). Cutaneous disorders (76%) gastrointestinal (20.7%), general (15.5%), and nervous disorders (8.6%) were the organ toxicity mapping due to drugs. Active pharmacovigilance has an essential role in supporting the development of strategies aimed at intervention to reduce admissions due to ADRs. Our data suggest that ADRs represent the first cause of hospitalization to the Pediatric Emergency Department. Furthermore, according to the literature, vaccines and antibiotics are the most frequent cause of adverse drug reactions in children.
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spelling pubmed-73794772020-08-05 A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily Nasso, Chiara Mecchio, Anna Rottura, Michelangelo Valenzise, Mariella Menniti-Ippolito, Francesca Cutroneo, Paola Maria Squadrito, Violetta Squadrito, Francesco Pallio, Giovanni Irrera, Natasha Arcoraci, Vincenzo Altavilla, Domenica Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Children represent one of the most susceptible groups to adverse drug reactions (ADRs), as a consequence of physiological growth and maturation of different organ systems. The aim of this study was to characterize the frequency, preventability and seriousness of ADRs recorded in the Pediatric Emergency Department (ED) of the University hospital of Messina, in Sicily. All the suspected adverse reactions to drugs and vaccines collected from 2012 to 2018 were selected and then analyzed. Only adverse drug reactions (ADRs) with a probable or possible causality assessment were included, according to the Naranjo Algorithm and the World Health Organization criteria; the preventability assessment using Schumock and Thornton criteria was also carried out. The Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA) was used to group ADRs. Of 75,935 admissions to the Pediatric ED, 120 were due to suspected ADRs. The rate of hospital admission due to ADRs (75.8%) was significantly greater than that of patients without ADRs (11.9%). Among pediatric patients with ADRs the median (Q1–Q3) age was 29.5 (12–73.25) months. Most of ADRs were observed in infants and children (43.3% and 41.7%, respectively vs adolescents, 15%). In addition, in children with ADRs, females [41 (14–105)] were older than males [23 (11–45)] (p=0.044). Most adverse reactions were serious (75.8%) and 20.8% were preventable or probably preventable; however, the majority of serious ADRs (93.4%) resulted without sequelae. The reactions were found to be as probable (54.2%) or possible (45.8%). Vaccines (n=63), antibacterials (n=31) and anti-inflammatory medicines (n=14) were the most frequently drugs involved. Organ toxicity mapping due to vaccines was general disorders and administration site conditions (65.1%), nervous disorders (50.2%), cutaneous disorders (35%), followed by gastrointestinal disorders (20.6%). Cutaneous disorders (76%) gastrointestinal (20.7%), general (15.5%), and nervous disorders (8.6%) were the organ toxicity mapping due to drugs. Active pharmacovigilance has an essential role in supporting the development of strategies aimed at intervention to reduce admissions due to ADRs. Our data suggest that ADRs represent the first cause of hospitalization to the Pediatric Emergency Department. Furthermore, according to the literature, vaccines and antibiotics are the most frequent cause of adverse drug reactions in children. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7379477/ /pubmed/32765282 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2020.01090 Text en Copyright © 2020 Nasso, Mecchio, Rottura, Valenzise, Menniti-Ippolito, Cutroneo, Squadrito, Squadrito, Pallio, Irrera, Arcoraci and Altavilla http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Nasso, Chiara
Mecchio, Anna
Rottura, Michelangelo
Valenzise, Mariella
Menniti-Ippolito, Francesca
Cutroneo, Paola Maria
Squadrito, Violetta
Squadrito, Francesco
Pallio, Giovanni
Irrera, Natasha
Arcoraci, Vincenzo
Altavilla, Domenica
A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily
title A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily
title_full A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily
title_fullStr A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily
title_full_unstemmed A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily
title_short A 7-Years Active Pharmacovigilance Study of Adverse Drug Reactions Causing Children Admission to a Pediatric Emergency Department in Sicily
title_sort 7-years active pharmacovigilance study of adverse drug reactions causing children admission to a pediatric emergency department in sicily
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7379477/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32765282
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2020.01090
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