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Costs associated with adverse drug reactions in an older population admitted to hospital: a prospective cohort study

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posted on 2024-10-01, 10:48 authored by Kathleen BennettKathleen Bennett, Caitriona CahirCaitriona Cahir, Jan SorensenJan Sorensen
Purpose: This study examines healthcare costs associated with adverse drug reactions (ADR) in an older population admitted acutely to an Irish tertiary hospital
Methods: Prospective cohort study involving older persons admitted to hospital with and without an ADR. Data was collected at baseline, during hospitalisation and post-discharge. Participants provided information on healthcare resource use three months before admission (baseline) and three months after discharge (follow-up). For each healthcare resource, unit costs were derived and applied. The average cost (standard deviation (SD)) associated with the hospital admission for the ADR and non-ADR are presented. In addition, baseline and follow-up care costs were compared using difference-in-difference analysis and presented with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Costs by preventability and severity of ADR are also presented.
Results: A total of n = 230 participants were included (n = 93 ADR and n = 137 without ADR). The average cost associated with hospital admission for an ADR was €9538 (SD €10442) and €9828 (SD €11770) for non-ADR. The additional follow-up costs (difference-in-difference) associated with the ADR was estimated at €2047 (95% CI: -€889 to €4983). The mean incremental follow-up cost of definite preventable ADRs was estimated at €1648 (95% CI: -€4310 to €7605), possible preventable ADRs €2259 (95 CI: -€1194 to €5712) and unavoidable ADRs €1757 (95% CI: -€3377 to €6890). The mean incremental follow-up cost associated with moderate severe ADRs was estimated at €1922 (95% CI: -€1088 to €4932) and €3580 (95% CI: -€4898 to €12,058) for severe ADRs. CONCLUSION: ADRs leading to hospital admission are associated with modest incremental healthcare costs during and three months after admission. Severe and possibly preventable ADRs were associated with higher costs.
Conclusion: ADRs leading to hospital admission are associated with modest incremental healthcare costs during and three months after admission. Severe and possibly preventable ADRs were associated with higher costs.

Funding

Open Access funding provided by the IReL Consortium

Health Research Board grants (HRB-RLA-15-1574 and HRB-SDA-2021-020)

RCSI StAR MD programme

History

Data Availability Statement

The dataset generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request

Comments

The original article is available at https://link.springer.com/

Published Citation

Bennett K, Cahir C, Sorensen J. Costs associated with adverse drug reactions in an older population admitted to hospital: a prospective cohort study. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2023;79(10):1417-1424.

Publication Date

24 August 2023

PubMed ID

37615688

Department/Unit

  • Data Science Centre
  • School of Population Health
  • Healthcare Outcomes Research Centre

Publisher

Springer Nature

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)