1. Adult medical emergency unit presentations due to adverse drug reactions in a setting of high HIV prevalence
- Author
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Sa'ad Lahri, Ushma Mehta, Ehimario U. Igumbor, Annemie Stewart, Richard Court, Gary Maartens, Hannah Gunter, Karen Cohen, Nicole Jobanputra, Johannes P. Mouton, and Christine Njuguna
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Adverse drug reaction ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,lcsh:Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Unit (housing) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Prevalence ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Emergency department ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,HIV ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Confidence interval ,Family medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,Original Article ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business ,Gerontology - Abstract
Introduction South Africa has the world's largest antiretroviral treatment programme, which may contribute to the adverse drug reaction (ADR) burden. We aimed to determine the proportion of adult non-trauma emergency unit (EU) presentations attributable to ADRs and to characterise ADR-related EU presentations, stratified according to HIV status, to determine the contribution of drugs used in management of HIV and its complications to ADR-related EU presentations, and identify factors associated with ADR-related EU presentation. Methods We conducted a retrospective folder review on a random 1.7% sample of presentations over a 12-month period in 2014/2015 to the EUs of two hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa. We identified potential ADRs with the help of a trigger tool. A multidisciplinary panel assessed potential ADRs for causality, severity, and preventability. Results We included 1010 EU presentations and assessed 80/1010 (7.9%) as ADR-related, including 20/239 (8.4%) presentations among HIV-positive attendees. Among HIV-positive EU attendees with ADRs 17/20 (85%) were admitted, versus 22/60 (37%) of HIV-negative/unknown EU attendees. Only 5/21 (24%) ADRs in HIV-positive EU attendees were preventable, versus 24/63 (38%) in HIV-negative/unknown EU attendees. On multivariate analysis, only increasing drug count was associated with ADR-related EU presentation (adjusted odds ratio 1.10 per additional drug, 95% confidence interval 1.03 to 1.18), adjusted for age, sex, HIV status, comorbidity, and hospital. Conclusions ADRs caused a significant proportion of EU presentations, similar to findings from other resource-limited settings. The spectrum of ADR manifestations in our EUs reflects South Africa's colliding epidemics of infectious and non-communicable diseases. ADRs among HIV-positive EU attendees were more severe and less likely to be preventable., Highlights • Medicine safety is an understudied field in Africa. • Africa has high HIV prevalence and rapid scale-up of HIV treatment programmes. • Antiretrovirals may contribute to the burden of drug-related harm. • We describe the burden of adverse drug reactions to two African emergency units. • We also describe the contribution of HIV and ART to this ADR burden.
- Published
- 2021
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