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Differences between Drug-Induced and Contrast Media-Induced Adverse Reactions Based on Spontaneously Reported Adverse Drug Reactions
Authors:JiHyeon Ryu  HeeYoung Lee  JinUk Suh  MyungSuk Yang  WonKu Kang  EunYoung Kim
Institution:1. Evidence-Based Research Laboratory, Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Care, College of Pharmacy, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, South Korea.; 2. Department of Pharmacy, Division of Pharmacovigilance, Saint Mary’s Hospital, Daejeon, South Korea.; 3. Department of Pharmaceutical Industry, ChungAng University, Seoul, South Korea.; 4. College of Pharmacy, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, South Korea.; Kinki University Faculty of Medicine, JAPAN,
Abstract:

Objective

We analyzed differences between spontaneously reported drug-induced (not including contrast media) and contrast media-induced adverse reactions.

Methods

Adverse drug reactions reported by an in-hospital pharmacovigilance center (St. Mary’s teaching hospital, Daejeon, Korea) from 2010–2012 were classified as drug-induced or contrast media-induced. Clinical patterns, frequency, causality, severity, Schumock and Thornton’s preventability, and type A/B reactions were recorded. The trends among causality tools measuring drug and contrast-induced adverse reactions were analyzed.

Results

Of 1,335 reports, 636 drug-induced and contrast media-induced adverse reactions were identified. The prevalence of spontaneously reported adverse drug reaction-related admissions revealed a suspected adverse drug reaction-reporting rate of 20.9/100,000 (inpatient, 0.021%) and 3.9/100,000 (outpatients, 0.004%). The most common adverse drug reaction-associated drug classes included nervous system agents and anti-infectives. Dermatological and gastrointestinal adverse drug reactions were most frequently and similarly reported between drug and contrast media-induced adverse reactions. Compared to contrast media-induced adverse reactions, drug-induced adverse reactions were milder, more likely to be preventable (9.8% vs. 1.1%, p < 0.001), and more likely to be type A reactions (73.5% vs. 18.8%, p < 0.001). Females were over-represented among drug-induced adverse reactions (68.1%, p < 0.001) but not among contrast media-induced adverse reactions (56.6%, p = 0.066). Causality patterns differed between the two adverse reaction classes. The World Health Organization–Uppsala Monitoring Centre causality evaluation and Naranjo algorithm results significantly differed from those of the Korean algorithm version II (p < 0.001).

Conclusions

We found differences in sex, preventability, severity, and type A/B reactions between spontaneously reported drug and contrast media-induced adverse reactions. The World Health Organization–Uppsala Monitoring Centre and Naranjo algorithm causality evaluation afforded similar results.
Keywords:
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