36 results on '"Lucien Roulet"'
Search Results
2. Tapentadol Versus Tramadol: A Narrative and Comparative Review of Their Pharmacological, Efficacy and Safety Profiles in Adult Patients
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Jules Alexandre Desmeules, Victoria Rollason, Valérie Piguet, and Lucien Roulet
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Analgesic ,Pain ,Review Article ,Serotonin syndrome ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Renal Insufficiency ,Adverse effect ,Active metabolite ,Tramadol ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Chronic pain ,medicine.disease ,Tapentadol ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Opioid ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP2D6 ,Anesthesia ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Liver Failure ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We conducted a narrative review of the literature to compare the pharmacological, efficacy and safety profiles of tapentadol and tramadol, and to assess the clinical interest of tapentadol in adult patients. Tapentadol and tramadol share a mixed mechanism of action, including both mu-agonist and monoaminergic properties. Tapentadol is approximately two to three times more potent than tramadol and two to three times less potent than morphine. It has no identified analgesically active metabolite and is not significantly metabolised by cytochrome P450 enzymes, thus overcoming some limitations of tramadol, including the potential for pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions and interindividual variability due to genetic polymorphisms of cytochrome P450 enzymes. The toxicity profiles of tramadol and tapentadol are similar; however tapentadol is likely to result in less exposure to serotoninergic adverse effects (nausea, vomiting, hypoglycaemia) but cause more opioid adverse effects (constipation, respiratory depression, abuse) than tramadol. The safety of tapentadol in real-world conditions remains poorly documented, particularly in at-risk patient subgroups and also in the ability to assess the risk associated with its residual serotonergic activity (serotonin syndrome, seizures). Because of an earlier market introduction, more real-world safety data are available for tramadol, including data from at-risk patient subgroups. The level of evidence on the efficacy of both tramadol and tapentadol for the treatment of chronic pain is globally low. The trials published to date show overall that tapentadol does not provide a clinically significant analgesic improvement compared to existing treatments, for which the safety profile is much better known. In conclusion, tapentadol is not a first-line opioid but represents an additional analgesic in the therapeutic choices, which some patients may benefit from after careful examination of their clinical situation, co-morbidities and co-medications.
- Published
- 2021
3. Opioïdes monoaminergiques : lequel choisir ?
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Lucien Roulet, Victoria Rollason, Jules Desmeules, and Valérie Piguet
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General Medicine - Published
- 2021
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4. Prise en charge de la crise hypertensive relative: se poser les bonnes questions, choisir le bon traitement
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Lucien Roulet, Emmanuel Benoit, and Monica Pagin
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General Medicine - Published
- 2022
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5. Prise en charge de la crise hypertensive relative: se poser les bonnes questions, choisir le bon traitement
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Lucien Roulet, Emmanuel Benoit, and Monica Pagin
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- 2022
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6. Rhabdomyolyse sur statines
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Marilne Franchitti, Jean-Christophe Laurent, Lucien Roulet, Anouk Grandjean, Alain Pithon, and Nomie Vecsernys
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- 2021
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7. Rhabdomyolyse bei Statintherapie
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Anouk Grandjean, Nomie Vecsernys, Lucien Roulet, Marilne Franchitti, Jean-Christophe Laurent, and Alain Pithon
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- 2021
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8. A nationwide cohort study with propensity score matching
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Lucien Roulet
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,Gastroenterology ,Proton-pump inhibitor ,Proton Pump Inhibitors ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious disease (medical specialty) ,Internal medicine ,Propensity score matching ,Cohort ,medicine ,Humans ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Observational study ,Biological plausibility ,Propensity Score ,business ,Retrospective Studies ,Cohort study - Abstract
Lee and colleagues recently published the first large-scale study to investigate the association between proton pump inhibitor (PPI) use and the infectious disease caused by COVID-19.1 Using a nationwide cohort sample with propensity score matching, they concluded that short-term current—but neither long-term current nor past—PPI usage was associated with worse outcomes of COVID-19. These results deserve some comments. By decreasing the barrier effect of gastric acidity and thus promoting the survival of ingested pathogens, PPIs are a known risk factor for some enteric bacterial and virus infections.2 3 Based on the evidence for a fecal–oral transmission in COVID-19, the authors made the hypothesis that PPI use might influence the susceptibility to COVID-19. Nevertheless, criteria other than biological plausibility should be taken into account when considering retrospective observational studies, in which information is not collected with …
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- 2020
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9. Antidiabétiques oraux et injectables pour le diabète de type 2. Prise en charge multidisciplinaire du diabète : recommandations pour la pratique clinique
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Chantal Arditi, Heike Labud, Lucien Roulet, Anne Zanchi, and Isabelle Peytremann-Bridevaux
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General Medicine - Published
- 2021
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10. Iatrogénie médicamenteuse : contribution à l’uniformisation de la terminologie en langue française pour la pratique de soins et la recherche clinique
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F. Ballereau, Lucien Roulet, Maryse Lapeyre-Mestre, Muriel Joris-Frasseren, and Nathalie Asseray
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychotherapist ,Task force ,business.industry ,French ,medicine.disease ,language.human_language ,Terminology ,Substance abuse ,Close relationship ,Pharmacovigilance ,medicine ,language ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,Adverse drug reaction ,Drug effect - Abstract
Developing a Terminology in the French Language for Clinical Practice and Research in Drug Safety. While several attempts have been made to clarify the English terminology of drug-related iatrogeny, a consensus has still not been reached in the French language. We set up a multidisciplinary task force to propose a terminology that differs from the one used in pharmacovigilance and risk management. We prefer the term "adverse drug event" (ADE) over "adverse drug reaction", and recommend avoiding the term "adverse event", which is too general. We propose to classify ADEs as "direct drug effect" or "drug involvement in a multifactorial pathological condition", taking into account the close relationship commonly found between drug and non-drug etiologies of a pathology. The consistent association between the notions "error" and "preventability" is also questionable, and we suggest assessing the "ameliorability" of ADEs rather than their "preventability". "Misuse" (i.e., the non-respect by the patient of the drug label) must be distinguished from "off- label use or substance abuse". Mots cles : terminologie ; iatropathologie ; evenement iatrogene medicamenteux ; effetindesirable ;erreurs medicamenteuses
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- 2015
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11. Prise en charge médicamenteuse des patients insuffisants rénaux chroniques hospitalisés en soins aigus dans un hôpital régional suisse
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Barbara Reutemann, Johnny Beney, Lucien Roulet, and Vera Jordan-von Gunten
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nephrology ,business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
Resume Introduction L’optimisation de la prise en charge medicamenteuse (PECM) de l’insuffisance renale chronique (IRC) permet de ralentir sa progression et de reduire les complications associees. Nous avons realise une etude observationnelle de la PECM des patients en IRC a leur sortie de l’hopital. Methode Il s’agit d’une etude retrospective sur 2 mois non consecutifs dans 5 services de soins aigus d’un hopital regional suisse, a partir du dossier patient informatise. Tout patient presentant a sa sortie de l’hopital un debit de filtration glomerulaire entre 15 et 60 mL/min/1,73 m 2 etait eligible. Le critere de jugement principal etait une PECM optimale de l’IRC, definie par l’adaptation posologique du traitement medicamenteux, l’absence de traitement contre-indique avec l’IRC et la presence d’un traitement pour toute comorbidite/complication liee a l’IRC, ou, a defaut, par la recommandation d’un suivi a la sortie. Resultats Parmi les 71 patients inclus, 45,1 % sont sortis avec une PECM conforme a l’ensemble des criteres retenus, 29,6 % avec au moins une posologie non adaptee a la fonction renale, 9,9 % avec un medicament contre-indique en raison du degre de l’IRC, et 73,2 % avec au moins une comorbidite/complication non traitee. L’anemie etait la comorbidite la plus frequente mais la moins souvent traitee. Pour 39 des 56 patients ayant quitte l’hopital avec un traitement non optimal, aucun suivi particulier n’etait prevu. Conclusion La PECM des patients presentant une IRC peut etre amelioree dans notre etablissement, notamment le traitement des comorbidites/complications, ainsi que l’organisation du suivi en ambulatoire.
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- 2015
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12. Adverse Drug Event Nonrecognition in Emergency Departments: An Exploratory Study on Factors Related to Patients and Drugs
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Jean-Benoit Hardouin, Gilles Potel, Nathalie Asseray, Anne Chiffoleau, Lucien Roulet, and F. Ballereau
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Water-Electrolyte Imbalance ,Pharmacist ,Exploratory research ,Hemorrhage ,Infections ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Patient Acuity ,Emergency department ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Middle Aged ,Pharmacoepidemiology ,Confidence interval ,Adverse drug event ,Emergency medicine ,Polypharmacy ,Emergency Medicine ,Consciousness Disorders ,Female ,Observational study ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,Constipation - Abstract
Many adverse drug events (ADEs) are not identified by emergency physicians. Research has been done to study risk factors for ADEs and help emergency physicians diagnose ADEs. However, no research has specifically examined the causes underlying a lack of attribution of ADEs to medications in emergency department (ED) patients.We conducted an exploratory study in a medical ED to search for the factors associated with ADE nonrecognition that are related to ED patients and ADEs.We conducted an observational study in the medical ED of a French tertiary care hospital between January and December 2009. The study focused on all ADEs, whether or not they were related to the patient's chief complaint. ADEs were identified by an expert physician and pharmacist based on National Electronic Injury Surveillance System criteria. An ADE was considered "attributed" if any evidence of ADE suspicion, ADE diagnosis, or ADE management was documented on ED charts. Factors associated with ADE nonrecognition were identified using multiple logistic regression analysis.Of the 465 included patients, 90 experienced an ADE at ED visit (19.4%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 15.9%-23.2%). Emergency physicians correctly recognized 36 of these cases (40.0%; 95% CI 29.8%-50.9%). On multivariate analysis, ADE nonrecognition was significantly associated with the following variables: nonrelation between the ADE and the patient's chief complaint; daily prescription of four drugs or more; and hospitalization ADE severity category.Our results emphasize the importance of searching for ADEs in patients with daily polypharmacy or whose chief complaint does not seem to be drug related.
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- 2014
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13. Letter: Medication administration via enteral feeding tube
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Emmanuel Benoit and Lucien Roulet
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0301 basic medicine ,Pharmacology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,business.industry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacy ,Guidelines as Topic ,Medication administration ,Community Pharmacy Services ,Toxicology ,Enteral administration ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Enteral Nutrition ,Drug Therapy ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Feeding tube - Published
- 2016
14. A questionnaire to document self-medication history in adult patients visiting emergency departments
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F. Ballereau, Maryse Lapeyre-Mestre, Lucien Roulet, Nadine Foucher, Nathalie Asseray, and Gilles Potel
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Medication history ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Cross-sectional study ,Public health ,MEDLINE ,Pharmacoepidemiology ,Reference Period ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Emergency medicine ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,Self-medication - Abstract
Purpose To develop the first questionnaire to obtain a complete medication history by documenting self-medication history in adult patients admitted to a medical emergency department (ED). Methods A Questionnaire to document Self-Medicating Behaviours (QSMB) was developed between January and September 2008 (reference period), tested and refined between October and December 2008, and used routinely between January and December 2009 (routine period) in a tertiary care medical ED. The rate of SMBs measured with QSMB during the routine period was compared to the SMB rate measured with a spontaneous reporting method during the reference period. As survey teams changed every trimester, we also analysed the evolution of SMB rate over time. Results QSMB is divided into two parts. The first part consists of 20 closed-ended questions exploring all indications and dimensions of self-medication. The second part assesses the characteristics of each medication mentioned by the patient in the first 20 questions. The patients interviewed during reference and routine periods did not significantly differ. The routine period patients reported a third more SMBs (89.8% vs 57.6%, respectively; p
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- 2012
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15. Étude des comportements d’automédication chez les patients admis dans un service d’urgences médicales
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Nathalie Asseray, Lucien Roulet, Nadine Foucher, Gilles Potel, Maryse Lapeyre-Mestre, and F. Ballereau
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,Iatrogenic disease ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmaco epidemiologie ,Health behavior ,business - Abstract
Resume Objectifs Decrire les comportements d’automedication (CAM) chez les patients admis dans un service d’urgences medicales ; etudier les facteurs associes aux CAM. Methodes Etude observationnelle transversale realisee en 2009. Les patients inclus etaient interroges sur leurs CAM a l’aide d’un questionnaire structure. La recherche des facteurs associes aux CAM a utilise une regression logistique multivariee. Resultats Parmi les 315 patients interroges, 239 (75,9 %) ont declare au moins un CAM au cours de leur vie, dont 43,9 % dans les 7 jours precedant l’admission aux urgences. Certains des medicaments recenses representaient un risque en termes de iatrogenie medicamenteuse. Apres ajustement, un âge ≥ 80 ans, un nombre de medicaments prescrits ≥ 4 et une situation de vulnerabilite sociale etaient associes a l’absence de CAM. Conclusion La description des CAM et l’analyse de leurs determinants sont necessaires pour ameliorer le reperage des situations iatrogenes liees a l’automedication chez les patients des urgences.
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- 2012
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16. Implementing a clinical pharmacy survey of adverse drug events in a French emergency department
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Anne Chiffoleau, Martin Dary, F. Ballereau, Gilles Potel, Lucien Roulet, and Nathalie Asseray
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Adult ,Male ,Program evaluation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Pharmacist ,MEDLINE ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacy ,Toxicology ,Tertiary Care Centers ,Public health surveillance ,Health care ,Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Pharmacology ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Pharmacoepidemiology ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Hospitalization ,Clinical pharmacy ,Hospital Bed Capacity ,Health Care Surveys ,Family medicine ,Female ,France ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Pharmacy Service, Hospital ,business ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Background The prevalence of adverse drug events (ADEs) occurring in the ambulatory setting is high, requiring the development of a coherent and comprehensive patient-safety policy framework. Former experiences demonstrated that emergency department (ED) surveillance can help characterise the burden of outpatient ADEs. We developed a clinical pharmacy programme called the clinical pharmacy survey of adverse drug events (CPSA) to support interventions and research projects in the area of ADE prevention and management. Objective To design a survey to identify and describe ADEs in patients visiting the medical ED of our tertiary care hospital. We report the results of the first 2 years of CPSA implementation and an assessment of its performance. Setting The medical ED of a French 3,000-bed tertiary care hospital. Method Between January 2008 and December 2009, adult patients visiting our medical ED were included during randomised time slots. Data were collected by pharmacy students. ADEs were documented by a trained physician pharmacist team using the chart review method. Main outcome measure The primary outcome was the number of patients visiting our ED with an ADE. The CPSA attributes were assessed on the basis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 2001 updated guidelines for evaluating public health surveillance systems. Results Of the 1,035 included patients, 201 experienced an ADE at the ED visit (19.4 %; 95 % confidence interval 15.8–23.0 %). Forty-seven ADEs (23.4 %) were unrelated to the patient’s chief complaint. An ADE was the leading cause of 154 in the 1,035 admissions (14.9 %). The assessment of our method on the basis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines showed good performances in terms of data quality, stability, flexibility, timeliness, and acceptability, but not in terms of simplicity and representativeness. The profile of patients with an ADE at admission and detected ADEs did not significantly differ between years 2008 and 2009. Conclusion Our experience demonstrates that clinical pharmacists can successfully implement a survey process of ADEs in an ED over time. Our method seems basic enough to suit most health care facilities with pharmacy students.
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- 2012
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17. Consommation de jus de pamplemousse et risque d’interactions médicamenteuses : étude transversale dans un service d’urgences médicales
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Maryse Lapeyre-Mestre, Nathalie Asseray, Gilles Potel, Anne Chiffoleau, Lucien Roulet, Marie-Line Mottier, and F. Ballereau
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,Drug toxicity - Abstract
Resume Objectif Evaluer la prevalence de la consommation de pamplemousse chez les patients admis dans un service d’urgences medicales et l’impact potentiel de cette consommation sur le risque d’interactions medicamenteuses. Methodes Etude observationnelle transversale realisee au deuxieme semestre 2009. L’analyse des donnees recueillies a notamment recherche les principaux medicaments connus pour etre a risque d’interaction avec le pamplemousse et la presence eventuelle d’un evenement iatrogene medicamenteux. Resultats Parmi 162 patients interroges, 59 (36 %) rapportaient une consommation de pamplemousse (toutes formes et frequences confondues) et 11 (7 %) presentaient une prescription a risque d’interaction medicamenteuse. Aucun evenement iatrogene medicamenteux imputable a une interaction avec le pamplemousse n’a ete identifie. Les inhibiteurs calciques et les inhibiteurs de l’HMG-coA-reductase ont ete les medicaments a risque d’interaction les plus souvent retrouves. Conclusion Les prescriptions a risque d’interaction avec le pamplemousse restent frequentes et impliquent des classesmedicamenteuses couramment utilisees mais semblent avoir peu de consequences cliniques.
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- 2011
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18. Informatisation de la gestion des stupéfiants : de la législation à la pratique
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Marie-Line Mottier, Christian Segui, Lucien Roulet, and Antoine Dupuis
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Pharmaceutical Science - Abstract
En regard de la reglementation des stupefiants et de la reforme de la legislation, le CHU de Poitiers a adapte et mis en place une application de gestion informatisee de ces substances GESTUP ® PLUS. Probablement une evolution necessaire compte tenu du recours croissant aux antalgiques opioides et de la multiplication des references presentes sur le marche.
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- 2011
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19. Aspects pharmacotechniques de la nutrition parentérale
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Lucien Roulet, Céline Saint-Laurent, and Antoine Dupuis
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Pharmaceutical Science - Published
- 2008
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20. Bonnes pratiques de préparations : le projet de l’Afssaps
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N. Maillard, Lucien Roulet, and Antoine Dupuis
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Pharmaceutical Science - Published
- 2007
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21. Establishing a pharmacy presence in the emergency department: opportunities and challenges in the French setting
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Nathalie Asseray, Lucien Roulet, and F. Ballereau
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Psychological intervention ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacy ,Toxicology ,Tertiary Care Centers ,Patient safety ,Medication Reconciliation ,Professional Role ,Nursing ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Quality of Health Care ,Pharmacology ,Service (business) ,business.industry ,Emergency department ,Clinical pharmacy ,Pharmaconomist ,Pharmacy practice ,France ,Patient Safety ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Pharmacy Service, Hospital - Abstract
Overview of clinical pharmacy practice around the world shows that pharmaceutical services in emergency departments (EDs) are far less common in Europe than in North America. Reported experiences have shown the impact of a clinical pharmacy service on drug utilisation and safety issues. This commentary presents the implementation of a pharmacy presence in the ED of a French tertiary care hospital. Our experience helps to define the role of the clinical pharmacist in the ED, including patient interviewing, providing medication reconciliation, promoting drug safety, and supporting specific interventions to improve quality of care and patient safety. The role of ED pharmacists in the improvement of quality of care is not necessarily limited to drug therapy, e.g. by helping outpatients to access care and treatment facilities as best suits their needs. Challenges of implementing ED pharmacy services have been identified well, but still require developing strategies to be overcome.
- Published
- 2014
22. [Drug treatment of inpatients with chronic kidney disease in the acute care ward of a Swiss regional hospital]
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Barbara, Reutemann, Johnny, Beney, Vera, Jordan-von Gunten, and Lucien, Roulet
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Hospitalization ,Male ,Medication Reconciliation ,Humans ,Female ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Switzerland ,Aged ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Optimal drug treatment may slow down the progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and reduce the associated complications. We conducted a study to assess the drug treatment of inpatients with CKD at their discharge.We retrospectively collected patient data from the electronic medical record of a Swiss regional hospital for two non-consecutive months. Patients were eligible if their glomerular filtration rate at discharge ranged between 15 and 60 mL/min/1.73 m2. Primary outcome was optimal CKD management, defined by drug treatment conforming to the following 3 criteria: (i) appropriate medication dosage relative to kidney function, (ii) absence of contraindicated medication, and (iii) treatment of any comorbidity/complication related to CKD; or alternatively by the recommendation of a kidney-specific follow-up.The primary outcome was achieved by 45.1% of the 71 patients included. A total of 29.6% had at least one inappropriate medication dosage at discharge, 9.9% left with a drug contraindicated in case of CKD, and 73.2% presented at least one untreated comorbidity/complication at discharge. The most common untreated comorbidity was anaemia. A proposition for a specific follow-up was lacking in 39 of the 56 patients discharged with a non-optimal treatment.Drug treatment of patients with CKD may be improved in our setting, especially the treatment of comorbidities/complications related to CKD and the specific ambulatory follow-up.
- Published
- 2014
23. Hirudothérapie : les sangsues n’ont pas fini de faire parler d’elles
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Lucien Roulet
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Pharmaceutical Science - Abstract
L’usage des sangsues vivantes est generalement reserve aux hopitaux, par l’intermediaire des services de chirurgie plastique et traumatologique ; il est egalement employe dans le traitement de l’arthrose. Malgre un retour en grâce dans les annees 1970, l’hirudotherapie est demeuree en marge des therapeutiques disponibles. Utilisee depuis l’Antiquite, elle est pourtant plus que jamais d’actualite : retour sur cette therapeutique a part.
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- 2010
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24. [Developing a terminology in the French language for clinical practice and research in drug safety]
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Lucien, Roulet, Françoise, Ballereau, Maryse, Lapeyre-Mestre, Muriel, Joris-Frasseren, and Nathalie, Asseray
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Pharmacovigilance ,Risk Management ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Terminology as Topic ,Iatrogenic Disease ,Humans ,Medication Errors ,Off-Label Use ,Language - Abstract
While several attempts have been made to clarify the English terminology of drug-related iatrogeny, a consensus has still not been reached in the French language. We set up a multidisciplinary task force to propose a terminology that differs from the one used in pharmacovigilance and risk management. We prefer the term "adverse drug event" (ADE) over "adverse drug reaction", and recommend avoiding the term "adverse event", which is too general. We propose to classify ADEs as "direct drug effect" or "drug involvement in a multifactorial pathological condition", taking into account the close relationship commonly found between drug and non-drug etiologies of a pathology. The consistent association between the notions "error" and "preventability" is also questionable, and we suggest assessing the "ameliorability" of ADEs rather than their "preventability". "Misuse" (i.e., the non-respect by the patient of the drug label) must be distinguished from "off-label use or substance abuse".
- Published
- 2013
25. A questionnaire to document self-medication history in adult patients visiting emergency departments
- Author
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Lucien, Roulet, Nathalie, Asseray, Nadine, Foucher, Gilles, Potel, Maryse, Lapeyre-Mestre, and Françoise, Ballereau
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Emergency Medical Services ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Self Medication ,Middle Aged ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Aged - Abstract
To develop the first questionnaire to obtain a complete medication history by documenting self-medication history in adult patients admitted to a medical emergency department (ED).A Questionnaire to document Self-Medicating Behaviours (QSMB) was developed between January and September 2008 (reference period), tested and refined between October and December 2008, and used routinely between January and December 2009 (routine period) in a tertiary care medical ED. The rate of SMBs measured with QSMB during the routine period was compared to the SMB rate measured with a spontaneous reporting method during the reference period. As survey teams changed every trimester, we also analysed the evolution of SMB rate over time.QSMB is divided into two parts. The first part consists of 20 closed-ended questions exploring all indications and dimensions of self-medication. The second part assesses the characteristics of each medication mentioned by the patient in the first 20 questions. The patients interviewed during reference and routine periods did not significantly differ. The routine period patients reported a third more SMBs (89.8% vs 57.6%, respectively; p 0.0001) and twice more self-medication drugs than the reference period patients. SMB rate was significantly different between the survey teams during the reference period (p 0.0001), but not during the routine period (p = 0.078).This questionnaire complements the traditional tools that are already available to collect medication histories of prescribed drugs. It may improve the recognition of iatrogenic conditions related to self-medication, and provide support to public health efforts and research programs on self-medication.
- Published
- 2012
26. Assessment of adverse drug event recognition by emergency physicians in a French teaching hospital
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Lucien Roulet, F. Ballereau, Jean-Benoit Hardouin, Leïla Moret, Gilles Potel, Nathalie Asseray, and Anne Chiffoleau
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Pilot Projects ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Teaching hospital ,Primary outcome ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Emergency physician ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Drug effect ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Adverse drug event ,Emergency medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,France ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital - Abstract
Objectives The frequency and the severity of drugrelated visits in emergency department (ED) make the improvement of adverse drug event (ADE) recognition a crucial issue. As part of a research project aiming to improve the diagnosis and the management of ADEs in ED, the authors conducted a pilot study whose primary objective was to assess ADE recognition by emergency physicians. Methods The patients presenting to the ED were included at randomised time periods between 1 October 2007 and 31 March 2008 in this prospective cross-sectional study. The primary outcome was the frequency of ADEs that were attributed to a medicationrelated problem by the emergency physician. Results A total of 423 patients met the inclusion criteria, of which 95 experienced an ADE (22.5%; 95% CI 18.6% to 26.7%). Emergency physicians correctly attributed 33 of these cases (34.7%; 95% CI 25.3% to 45.2%) to a medication-related problem. Of the 28 cases in which the ADE was considered as a ‘direct drug effect’ (29.5%; 95% CI 20.6% to 39.7%), 16 were correctly identified by emergency physicians (57.1%; 95% CI 37.2% to 75.5%). Of the 67 cases in which the ADE was considered as a ‘drug involvement in a multifactorial pathological condition’ (70.5%; 95% CI 60.3% to 79.4%), 17 were correctly attributed (25.4%; 95% CI 15.5% to 37.5%). Conclusions ADEs are frequent in EDs and are not well recognised by emergency physicians, especially when the drug is involved in a multifactorial pathological condition.
- Published
- 2012
27. [Self-medicating behaviours in patients admitted to a medical emergency department]
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Lucien, Roulet, Nathalie, Asseray, Nadine, Foucher, Gilles, Potel, Maryse, Lapeyre-Mestre, and Françoise, Ballereau
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Health Behavior ,Iatrogenic Disease ,Self Medication ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,Patient Admission ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Longitudinal Studies ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Aged - Abstract
To describe the self-medicating behaviours (SMBs) in patients admitted to a tertiary care medical emergency department (ED); to study the factors associated with SMBs.Observational cross-sectional study conducted in 2009. Included patients were interviewed about their SMBs using a standardized questionnaire. The search for factors associated with SMBs used multivariate logistic regression analysis.Among the 315 patients who were interviewed, 239 (75.9%) reported one SMBs or more in their lives and 105 (43.9%) within 7 days of admission to the ED. Some of the medications reported during interviews are known to be associated with adverse drug events. After adjustment, SMBs were conversely associated with an age ≥80 years, a number of prescribed medications ≥4 and a social vulnerability condition.The description of SMBs and the analysis of their determinants are necessary to improve the recognition of adverse events related to self-medication in ED patients.
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- 2012
28. Evénement indésirable lié à l’automédication : enquête prospective multicentique dans 11 services d’urgences
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A. Astier, J.L. Pourriat, J. Bouget, B. Renaud, A. Dauphin, P. Cestac, F. Carpentier, E. Degris, A. Marquet, Nathalie Asseray, P. Tilleul, Gilles Potel, A. Armand-Perroux, A. Boyer, C. Hecquard, J. Calop, Lucien Roulet, N. Foucher, P. Le Corre, F. Chast, M.A. Clerc, J. Schmidt, D. Pateron, G. Kierzek, E. Roupie, and F. Ballereau
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Pharmacology (medical) - Published
- 2014
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29. [Grapefruit consumption and food-drug interaction hazard]
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Lucien, Roulet, Nathalie, Asseray, Marie-Line, Mottier, Anne, Chiffoleau, Gilles, Potel, Maryse, Lapeyre-Mestre, and Françoise, Ballereau
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Adult ,Male ,Risk ,Emergency Medical Services ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Middle Aged ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,Food-Drug Interactions ,Pharmacovigilance ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Humans ,Female ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Aged ,Citrus paradisi - Abstract
To estimate the prevalence of grapefruit consumption in patients admitted to a tertiary care emergency department (ED) and its potential impact on the risk of fruit-drug interaction.Observational cross-sectional study conducted in a medical ED between July and December 2009. Data analysis searched for the main drugs which can dramatically interact with grapefruit and for adverse drug events (ADEs). Among the 162 patients who were interviewed, 59 (36%) reported grapefruit consumption (regardless form or frequency) and 11 (7%) were prescribed a treatment with a risk of fruit-drug interaction. No ADE could be related to an interaction with grapefruit. Calcium channel blockers and HMG-coA-reductase inhibitors mostly accounted for drugs at risk of interaction in grapefruit consumers.These results give evidence of the sizeable risk of grapefruit-drug interaction in the prescriptions of patients admitted to a medical ED, with a high proportion of commonly used medicines but poor clinical consequences.
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- 2010
30. Les auteurs
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Benoît Allenet, Amal Al Hajj-Karnib, Denis Angoulvant, Marie Antignac, Xavier Armoiry, Gilles Aulagner, Jean-Philippe Baguet, Hélène Barreteau, Magalie Baudrant, Pierrick Bedouch, Marie-Anne Bertrand, Magali Bolon-Larger, Bruno Bonaz, Éric Bonnefoy, Roselyne Boulieu, Anne Boyer-Grand, Michel Brazier, Étienne Brudieu, Philippe Brunet, Marion Buyse, Jean Calop, Nathalie Calop, Philippe Caron, Claude Cassat, Maryan Cavicchi, Claire Chapuis, Natacha Chaumard, Jean Chopineau, Jean-François Claerbout, Bertrand Clerc, Rémy Contreras, Bertrand Décaudin, Françoise Desbiez, Nicole Desplaces, Thierry Dine, Cécile Djian, Christian Derouesné, Françoise Desablens, Xavier Dode, Murray P. Ducharme, Antoine Dupuis, Patrice Fardellone, Robert Farinotti, Pierre Faure, Isabelle Federspiel, Christine Fernandez, Ema Ferreira, Éric Francois, Émilie Franchon, Emmanuel Germain, Bertrand Gourdier, Cécile Goujard, Jean Grellet, Sylvie Guichard, Nassira Hadri, Anne Hulin, Virginie Kaulek-Westeel, Joëlle Laederich, François Lebargy, Christine Legat-Fagnoni, Roger Leverge, Samuel Limat, Catherine Lok, Michel Luyckx, Isabelle Madelaine, Claude Mailhot, Louise Mallet, Philippe Marteau, Laurent Massias, Mehdi Medjoub, Jean-François Mornex, Pascal Odou, Chantal Pharand, Alain Ragon, Cécile Raignoux, Voa Ratsimbazafy, Chrystelle Rey, Denis Richard, Hugues Robert, Lucien Roulet, Brigitte Sallerin, Valérie Sautou-Miranda, Marie-Claude Saux, Jean-Louis Senon, Éric Singlas, Frédéric Somda, Jean-Philippe Steinmetz, Nathalie Sylvoz, Anne-Marie Taburet, Frédéric Tacco, Marc Talbert, Igor Tauveron, Daniel J.G. Thirion, Marie Thuong-Guyot, Caroline Trivin, Nicolas Venisse, Isabelle Vincent, David Williamson, Michel Wolff, and Marie-Christine Woronoff-Lemsi
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- 2008
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31. Traitement de la tuberculose
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Chapitre révisé pour cette édition par, Serge Bouquet, Nicolas Venisse, Chapitre initialement rédigé par, Lucien Roulet, and Antoine Dupuis
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business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2008
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32. Identifying psychiatric medications causing high numbers and rates of emergency department visits among US adults
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Lucien Roulet
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education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,Medical record ,Population ,Poison control ,Emergency department ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Public health surveillance ,Psychiatric medication ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,education ,Adverse effect ,business ,Psychiatry - Abstract
FROM: Hampton LM, Daubresse M, Chang HY, et al . Emergency department visits by adults for psychiatric medication adverse events. JAMA Psychiatry 2014;71:1006–14. More than 1 in 10 adults in the USA use psychiatric medications to treat mental illness. Data are lacking on the prevalence of adverse drug events (ADEs) resulting from therapeutic use of psychiatric medications when used outside of strictly controlled clinical trials. As an interface between hospitals and communities, emergency departments (EDs) represent an ideal place to identify and characterise ADEs occurring in the general population. The authors reviewed and analysed medical records from national probability samples of ED and outpatient visits by adults 19 years or older, from 2009 to 2011. Data were extracted from three US population-representative public health surveillance databases, including the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System-Cooperative Adverse Drug Event Surveillance (NEISS-CADES) project, based on data collected from a nationally representative sample of US hospital EDs. Sedatives and anxiolytics, …
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- 2015
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33. Clinical Decision Rules to Improve Adverse Drug Events
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F. Ballereau, Nathalie Asseray, and Lucien Roulet
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Male ,Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Medicine ,Decision Support Techniques ,Emergency Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Intensive care medicine ,Clinical decision ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2012
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34. Observatoire de la iatrogénie médicamenteuse dans un service d’urgences : amelioration du repérage des EIM (événements iatrogènes médicamenteux) par les médecins après 4 années d’expérience
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Gilles Potel, F. Ballereau, M. Van Tricht, V. Pinaud, Lucien Roulet, N. Foucher, F. Ollivier, and Nathalie Asseray
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Pharmacology (medical) - Published
- 2012
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35. D-03 État des lieux du bon usage des antibiotiques dans les établissements de santé MCO de la Région Pays-de-la-Loire
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F. Ballereau, Gilles Potel, F. Ollivier, P. Lombrail, Lucien Roulet, and D. Feldman
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Infectious Diseases - Abstract
Objectifs Sous l’impulsion de l’ARH, le Comite Regional du Medicament et des Dispositifs Medicaux a missionne le Centre MedQual (Centre d’information pour le bon usage de produits de sante) afin de dresser un etat des lieux des strategies de bon usage des antibiotiques developpees en 2007 dans les etablissements de sante court sejour de la Region Pays de la Loire. Methode Un questionnaire a ete envoye dans 54 etablissements MCO de la Region. Les items du questionnaire reprenaient les principales recommendations de la circulaire du 2 mai 2002 relative au bon usage des antibiotiques. Resultats Dans les etablissements ayant repondu au questionnaire (91 % de participation) les actions les plus frequemment engagees etaient la diffusion de la liste des antibiotiques disponibles (98 %), la diffusion d’informations sur l’ecologie bacterienne (81 %) et la consommation d’antibiotiques (86 %) exprimee en DDJ/1 000 j d’hospitalisation dans les deux tiers des cas, le controle de la dispensation de certains antibiotiques (60 %). Deux tiers des etablissements ont identifie un referent en antibiotherapie et des recommandations locales d’antibiotherapie curative existaient dans 69 % des cas et prophylactique dans 92 % des etablissements concernes. L’evaluation de l’utilisation des antibiotiques a ete pratiquee dans 63 % des etablissements. En revanche, depuis 2005, peu de formations en antibiotherapie ont ete organisees par les etablissements (16 %). La frequence des actions menees varie en fonction de la taille de l’etablissement. Conclusion Cette enquete a permis d’identifier des pistes d’amelioration du bon usage des antibiotiques comme la diffusion de referentiels de prescription, la formation de referents en antibiotherapie, ainsi que l’harmonisation du suivi des consummations d’antibiotiques et de l’ecologie bacterienne dans ces etablissements.
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- 2008
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36. Frequency and Severity of Adverse Drug Reactions Due to Self-Medication: A Cross-Sectional Multicentre Survey in Emergency Departments
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Françoise Carpentier, Gérald Kierzek, Patrice Queneau, Lucien Roulet, Nathalie Asseray, Jacques Bouget, Nadine Foucher, Gilles Potel, Bertrand Renaud, Béatrice Trombert-Paviot, Jeannot Schmidt, F. Ballereau, and Aurore Armand-Perroux
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Cross-sectional study ,Short Communication ,Nonprescription Drugs ,Self Medication ,Toxicology ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Drug reaction ,10. No inequality ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Multicenter study ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Observational study ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,Adverse drug reaction ,Self-medication - Abstract
Background Little is known about the relation of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to self-use of medications. Objective The aim of this study was to determine the frequency and severity of ADRs related to self-medication (ADR-SM) among emergency department (ED) patients and to describe their main characteristics. Methods A prospective, cross-sectional, observational study was conducted over a period of 8 weeks (1 March to 20 April 2010), in the ED of 11 French academic hospitals. Adult patients presenting to the ED during randomization periods were included, with the exception of cases of self-drug poisoning, inability to complete self-medication questionnaire, or refusal. Clinical outcomes were assessed as well as history of self-medication behaviours and all drugs taken. All doubtful files and those related to ADR-SM were systematically reviewed by an expert committee. Results A total of 3,027 of 4,661 patients presenting to the ED met the inclusion criteria. Of these, 84.4 % declared a self-medication behaviour, 63.7 % took at least one non-prescribed drug during the previous 2 weeks and 59.9 % took a prescribed medication. A total of 296 patients experienced an ADR (9.78 %), of which 52 (1.72 %) were related to self-medication. Those ADRs related to self-medication included prescribed drugs (n = 19), non-prescribed drugs (n = 17), treatment discontinuation (n = 14), and interactions between non-prescribed and prescribed drugs (n = 2). The ADRs attributed to non-prescribed drugs represented 1 % of all patients taking non-prescribed drugs (n = 1,927). ADR severity was significantly lower for those related to self-medication (p = .032). Conclusion Self-medication is frequent; its potential toxicity should not be neglected, taking into account the rate of adverse drug reactions in about 1 % of ED patient. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s40264-013-0114-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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