Abstract
Abstract
Background
Medicines designed for adults may be inappropriate for use in children in terms of strength, dosage form and/or excipient content. There is currently no standardised method of assessing the age-appropriateness of a medicine for paediatric use.
Aim
To develop and test a tool to assess whether a dosage form (formulation) is appropriate for children and estimate the proportion of formulations considered ‘inappropriate’ in a cohort of hospitalised paediatric patients with a chronic illness.
Method
A multi-phase study: patient data collection, tool development, case assessments and tool validation. Inpatients aged 0–17 years at two UK paediatric/neonatal hospitals during data collection periods between January 2015 and March 2016. Written informed consent/assent was obtained. Medicines assessed were new or regularly prescribed to inpatients as part of their routine clinical care. All medicine administration episodes recorded were assessed using the Age-appropriate Formulation tool. The tool was developed by a consensus approach, as a one-page flowchart. Independent case assessments were evaluated in 2019.
Results
In 427 eligible children; 2,199 medicine administration episodes were recorded. Two assessors reviewed 220 episodes in parallel: percentage exact agreement was found to be 91.7% (99/108) and 93.1% (95/102). In total, 259/2,199 (11.8%) medicine administration episodes involved a dosage form categorised as ‘age-inappropriate’.
Conclusion
A novel tool has been developed and internally validated. The tool can identify which medicines would benefit from development of an improved paediatric formulation. It has shown high inter-rater reliability between users. External validation is needed to further assess the tool’s utility in different settings.
Funder
Seventh Framework Programme
Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology,Toxicology,Pharmacy
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. Off-Label Prescribing in Pediatric Population—Literature Review for 2012–2022;Pharmaceutics;2023-11-21
2. Drug Safety in Children: Research Studies and Evidence Synthesis;Encyclopedia of Evidence in Pharmaceutical Public Health and Health Services Research in Pharmacy;2023
3. Drug Safety in Children: Research Studies and Evidence Synthesis;Encyclopedia of Evidence in Pharmaceutical Public Health and Health Services Research in Pharmacy;2023