Adverse Drug Reactions Flashcards

1
Q

What is an adverse drug reaction?

A

Any response to a drug which is noxious, unintended and occurs at doses used in man for prophylaxis, diagnosis or treatment

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2
Q

Common drugs involved:

A
  • Antibiotics
  • Antineoplastics
  • Anticoagulants
  • Cardiovascular drugs
  • Hypoglycaemics
  • Antihypertensives
  • NSAID/Analgesics
  • Diagnostic agents
  • CNS drugs (neuro and psych)
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3
Q

Body systems commonly involved:

A
  • Haematologic
  • CNS
  • Dermatologic/allergic
  • Metabolic
  • Cardiovascular
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Renal/genitourinary
  • Respiratory
  • Sensory
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4
Q

ADR risk factors

A
  • Age
  • Multiple medications
  • Multiple co-morbid conditions
  • Inappropritate medication prescribing use or monitoring
  • End-organ dysfunction
  • Altered physiology
  • Prior history of ADRs
  • Extent (dose) and duration of exposure
  • Genetic predisposition
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5
Q

Frequency of ADRs

A
  • 10-20% of all inpatients suffer an adverse drug reaction
  • 6.5% of hospital admissions occur as a result of an ADR
  • 4th leading cause of death
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6
Q

Classification of onset of ADRs

A
  • Acute: within 60 minutes, bronchoconstriction
  • Sub-acute: 1 to 24 hours. Rash, serum sickness
  • Latent: >2 days. Eczematous eruptions
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7
Q

Classification of severity of ADRs

A
  • Mild: bothersome but requires no change in therapy
  • Moderate: requires change in therapy, additional treatment, hospitalisation
  • Severe: Disabling or life-threatening, kidney failure
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8
Q

Type A ADR

A
  • Augmented
  • Dose related
  • Predictable can often be unrelated to primary effect
  • Resolve when the drug is reduced or stopped
  • Recognised before a drug is available
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9
Q

Type B ADR

A
  • Bizarre
  • Idiosyncratic
  • Unpredictable
  • Rare
  • Cause serious illness or death
  • Unidentified for months or years
  • Unrelated to dose
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10
Q

Type C

A
  • Chronic/long term effects
  • Related to duration of treatment as well as dose.
  • Semi-predictable
  • Doesn’t occur with one dose
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11
Q

Type D

A
  • Delayed

- Adverse effects occur after some time e.g. children of treated patients or treated patients years after treatment

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12
Q

Type E

A
  • End of treatment effects

- Adverse effects when drug is stopped suddenly

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13
Q

Type F

A
  • Failure of treatment
  • Common
  • Dose related
  • Frequently cause by drug interactions
  • Failure of Oral Contraceptives when administered with hepatic enzyme inducers/antibiotics
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14
Q

Examples of Type A ADR

A
  • Galactorrhoea with domperidone

- Dry mouth with tricyclic antidepressants

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15
Q

Reasons for Type A ADRs

A
  • Too high a dose
  • Pharmaceutical variation
    2 main ones:
  • Pharmacokinetic (ADME)
  • Pharmacodynamic variation
  • Pharmacogenetic. 10% population slow metabolisers, can be prone to drug toxicity
  • Disease: renal, hepatic, cardiac failure (oedomas in gut, decreased GFR, hepatic congestion)
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16
Q

Factors that affect Type B reactions

A
  • More common with macromolecules: protein, vaccine, polypeptides
  • Patients with a history of asthma, eczema
  • Presence of certain HLAs
17
Q

Immunological mechanisms of Type B

A
  • No relation to the pharmacological action of the drug
  • Delay between exposure and ADR
  • No response curve
  • Manifests as rash, asthma, serum sickness
  • Idiosyncratic: inherent abnormal response, abnormal receptor activity
18
Q

Pharmacogenetic mechanisms of Type B

A
  • Genetic
  • Examples of genetic: enzyme abnormality. Erthythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate deydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
  • Susceptible to red cell haemolysis when given drugs such as primaquine and sulphonamides
  • Receptor abnormality malignant hyperthermia with general anaesthetics

Also get immunological

19
Q

Examples of Type C reactions

A
  • Iatrogen Cushings disease
  • Steroid induced osteoporosis
  • Opiate dependence
  • Analgesic neuropathy due to paracemtaol or NSAIDS
20
Q

Examples of Type D reactions

A
  • Teratogenesis: Craniofacial malformation in children with mothers who have been treated with isotretinoin
  • Carcinogenesis: those treated with alkylating agents or immunosuppressive agents such as cyclophosphamide
21
Q

Examples of Type E reactions

A
  • Unstable angina and MI when beta blockers are stopped
  • Addisonian crisis when long term steroids suddenly stopped e.g. hypopituitism if you come off steroids and your adrenals are suppressed
  • Withdrawal seizures when antiepileptics are stopped
22
Q

Rebound phenomena

A
  • Alcohol
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Beta blockers
  • Corticosteroids
23
Q

Diagnosis steps of ADR:

A
  1. Differential diagnosis
  2. Medication history (past and present)
  3. Assess time of onset and dose relationship
  4. Laboratory investigation: plasma concentration measurement and allergy tests
24
Q

How to report ADRs

A
- Yellow Cards
Collect info on:
- Side effects
- Medical device adverse incidents
- Defective medicines
- Counterfeit or fake medicines or medical devices