Frequency and cost of serious adverse drug reactions in a department of general medicine

Abstract
Aims To assess the frequency and cost of drug reactions causing or prolonging hospitalization. Methods All patients admitted to an internal medicine ward over 6 months were evaluated to identify serious adverse reactions. The number of drug classes on admission or at the time of the adverse drug reaction (ADR) was counted. Excess ADR-related hospital stay was computed using a) raw excess duration of hospital stay, b) correction of duration of hospital stay by age, sex, and number of drug classes, and c) estimation by investigator of excess hospital stay. Results Three hundred and twenty-nine patients were evaluated: 212 male, 117 female, mean age 57.2 (males: 52.2, females: 66.2 (PPvs the two other groups), taking 6.3 drug classes, who stayed a mean of 15.1 days; 21 occurred in hospital in patients with a mean age of 63.6, taking 4.2 drug classes (PPvs patients without ADRs). In four the ADR was fatal (13% of ADRs, 40% of deaths). Raw ADR-related excess hospital stay was 318 days (8.6% of all hospital days), after multivariate correction 282 days (7.6% of all hospital days), and with investigator estimation 197 days (5.3% of all hospital days). Point prevalence of ADRs at admission was 3%, incidence rate in hospital was 5.6/1000 patient-days. Conclusions 3% of the admissions were related to ADRs. In addition, 6.6% of hospitalized patients had significant ADRs. Between 5 and 9% of hospital costs were related to ADRs. In 24 of the 31 patients with ADRs (77%), these were related to the pharmacological properties of the involved drugs, and may possibly have been avoidable.