AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on the impact of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in hospitalized children at a tertiary care pediatric hospital in Mexico.
  • ADR frequency ranged from 2.12% to 8.07%, predominantly affecting children with neoplasms in the Emergency Department, with serious ADRs noted in 81% of cases.
  • The findings emphasize the critical need for improved pharmacovigilance programs in Mexican pediatric healthcare to address the morbidity and mortality associated with ADRs.

Article Abstract

Introduction: In Pediatrics, adverse drug reactions (ADRs) affect morbidity and mortality. In Mexico, the characteristics of ADRs and suspect drugs have not been described in hospitalized children.

Objective: To estimate the frequency of ADRs and describe them, as well as suspect drugs, in a tertiary care pediatric hospital in Mexico.

Methods: A total of 1,649 Hospital Infantil de Mexico Federico Gómez ADR reports were analyzed. Completeness of the information was assessed, and ADRs severity and seriousness were assigned based on NOM-220-SSA1-2012, with causality being established according to the Naranjo algorithm. ADRs were classified with WHO Adverse Drug Reaction Terminology (WHO-ART). The drugs involved in ADRs were categorized according to the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification. Descriptive analysis was performed using the SPSS 20 statistical package.

Results: Of all the reports, 5.8% lacked sufficient information for the analysis (grade 0). ADRs frequency ranged from 2.12% to 8.07%. ADRs occurred most commonly in children (56.9%), in the female gender (52%), in subjects with normal BMI Z-score (46.6%) and malnutrition (35.3%), diagnosed with neoplasms (72.2%) and in the Emergency Department (70.0%). ADRs were severe in 14.4% of cases, in 81.0% they were serious and 2.1% were classified as definite. Most common serious ADR was febrile neutropenia (44.5%). The 0.7% of patients recovering with sequelae; 1.1% died (with the medication being associated) and 70.3% were admitted to the hospital as a result of an ADR. Antineoplastic and immunomodulating agents were more commonly associated with serious ADRs.

Conclusion: ADRs affected morbidity and mortality, which is why strengthening pharmacovigilance programs in Mexican pediatric hospitals is necessary.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7092985PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0230576PLOS

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