Intelligent Prescription Systems (IPS) represent a promising frontier in healthcare, offering the potential to optimize medication selection, dosing, and monitoring tailored to individual patient needs. This comprehensive review explores the current landscape of IPS, encompassing various technological approaches, applications, benefits, and challenges. IPS leverages advanced computational algorithms, machine learning techniques, and big data analytics to analyze patient-specific factors, such as medical history, genetic makeup, biomarkers, and lifestyle variables. By integrating this information with evidence-based guidelines, clinical decision support systems, and real-time patient data, IPS generates personalized treatment recommendations that enhance therapeutic outcomes while minimizing adverse effects and drug interactions. Key components of IPS include predictive modeling, drug-drug interaction detection, adverse event prediction, dose optimization, and medication adherence monitoring. These systems offer clinicians invaluable decision-support tools to navigate the complexities of medication management, particularly in the context of polypharmacy and chronic disease management. While IPS holds immense promise for improving patient care and reducing healthcare costs, several challenges must be addressed. These include data privacy and security concerns, interoperability issues, integration with existing electronic health record systems, and clinician adoption barriers. Additionally, the regulatory landscape surrounding IPS requires clarification to ensure compliance with evolving healthcare regulations. Despite these challenges, the rapid advancements in artificial intelligence, data analytics, and digital health technologies are driving the continued evolution and adoption of IPS. As precision medicine gains momentum, IPS is poised to play a central role in revolutionizing medication management, ultimately leading to more effective, personalized, and patient-centric healthcare delivery.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0113816128321623240719104337 | DOI Listing |
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CiRA Foundation, Research and Development Center, Osaka, Japan.
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Department of Cancer Immunotherapy and Immunology, Institute of Medicine, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8575, Japan.
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Department of Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima University, Tokushima 770-8505, Japan.
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