Implementation of the pharmacovigilance database in the usage of antibiotics in a tertiary care hospital: A pilot study

Author:

Krushna Karri Juhu Kiran1,Misra Arup Kumar1,Saggurthi Pavani1,Sharma Sushil1,Madhavrao C.1,Rangari Gaurav1,Kutikuppala L. V. Simhachalam1,Varshitha Golla2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Mangalagiri Andhra Pradesh India

2. Department of Internal Medicine International School of Medicine (ISM) Bishkek Kyrgyzstan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAntimicrobial resistance (AMR) has evolved into a severe public health issue that defies all current control strategies and needs multidisciplinary, creative solutions. Antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) activities demand a set of tools and abilities that can be used by health systems. In view of the growing AMR and the difficulty for the surveillance of it in the developing country, this study was conducted to incorporate pharmacovigilance (PV) in the AMS program.Materials and MethodsA cross‐sectional pilot study was conducted to collect the PV database of antimicrobials induced adverse drug reactions (ADR) from the Adverse Drug Reactions Monitoring Center (AMC) of the institute for a period of 2 months from August 2022 to September 2022. The information from the database was analyzed to estimate the usage of antibiotics from the PV database from AMC and classified it under the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical, to assess the rationality of the antimicrobial's usage based on “Access,” “Watch,” and “Reserve” (AWaRe) classification, and to assess the ADR of the antibiotics. The analysis was done by using the SPSS version 20.0 for Windows.ResultsThe results showed that the prevalence of ADRs were more in adults’ population with preponderance in female. The antibiotics usage was as per with World Health Organization standard and most of the antibiotics used were from the Access group of AWaRe classifications. Tetracyclines and penicillins were the most used antibiotic group of drugs. The number of patients included in the study was 70. Most of the causality assessment was “possible” (62.85%). In the study, almost 90% of the drug was withdrawn and 70% of the patients were in the recovering stage.ConclusionUsing existing PV approaches to address usage of antibiotics and AMR issues would allow PV to progress as a field, and governments will get a stronger return on their PV investments.

Funder

Indian Council of Medical Research

Publisher

Wiley

Reference39 articles.

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