Author:
Chang Hen-Hong,Chiang Su-Yin,Chen Pei-Chun,Tsai Chia-Han,Yang Rong-Chi,Tsai Chiu-Lin,Wu Tsung-hsiu,Hsieh Yow-Wen,Lin Yu-Chun,Kuo Yung-Te,Chen Kuan-Chung,Chu Hsueh-Ting
Abstract
AbstractThe Taiwan Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting System for Herbal Medicine (TADRRS-HM) has systematically documented suspected adverse events from adverse drug reaction (ADR) reports from 1998 (prior to its formal establishment in 2001) and evaluates safety profiles of herbal medicines. This article describes findings from 2079 ADR reports filed between 1998 and 2016: 941 reports involved single herbs and 87 involved folk herbals; 842 were generated from clinical trials, while 209 ADR reports involving foods, health foods, dietary supplement foods and herbal cuisine were grouped as Other. Severity assessments using the Modified Hartwig and Siegel scale classified 72.4% of ADRs as mild, 17.4% as moderate and 6.5% as severe. System Organ Class classification of the ADRs identified gastrointestinal system disorders as the most common (33.4%), followed by skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders (21.2%). The TADRRS-HM records indicate that herbal medicines may cause a wide range of ADRs. Aconiti Radix, Xiao-Qing-Long-Tang, and Datura suaveolens were the most commonly reported single herb, herbal formula, and folk herbal, respectively. The data indicate that herbal medicines may cause a wide range of ADRs. This system will confer long-term benefits for the development of Taiwan’s herbal medicines adverse reaction database and facilitate epidemiological analysis.
Funder
Ministry of Health and Welfare
China Medical University Hospital
Ministry of Education
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
16 articles.
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