Affiliation:
1. Postgraduate Program in Child and Adolescent Health, Department of Pediatrics, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
2. Department of Paediatrics, Hospital De Clínicas De Porto Alegre, Porto Alegre, Brazil
Abstract
Background:
Unlicensed (UL) and Off-label (OL) prescription of medications is common
in paediatrics and does not constitute negligent practice since there is often no approved alternative
according to FDA bulary.
Aim:
The study aimed to determine the current frequency of UL and OL prescriptions in children
from one month to 12 years of age in a Paediatric Inpatient Unit (PIU).
Methods:
This is an observational, prospective study, reviewing the prescriptions of all patients
admitted to the PIU in a university hospital in a single week in August 2014 and a single week in
January 2015.
Results:
We included 157 patients of median age 18 months and median length of stay 24 days.
There were 1,328 prescription items (average of 8.4 items/patient) and only two patients without
UL/OL use. During the winter season (August), 27% of prescriptions were classified as UL and
44.6% as OL, and during summer (January), 29.6% as UL and 45.1% as OL. We identified 188
medications, of which the most prescribed were paracetamol (11%) and dipyrone (9.5%). The most
frequent OL classification was regarding drug formulation (15.8%). In the winter week, the most
frequent reasons for admission were respiratory (44%), followed by other clinical causes (CC)
(17.3%), while in the summer week, they were CC (26.3%), followed by surgical and gastrohepatic
(23.7%).
Conclusion:
The OL prescription of medicines for children in Brazil is in accordance with the international
literature. The higher prevalence of OL due to formulation found in this study is related
to the use of formulations other than those used by the FDA.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
Cited by
3 articles.
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