Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) Flashcards

1
Q

Define an adverse drug reaction?

A

Any noxious or unintended response to a drug occuring at doses used for prophylaxis, diagnosis or treatment.

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2
Q

What are the 3 criteria of an adverse drug reactions? (definition)

A

The response must be:
Noxious
Unintended
The dose must be one used for prophylaxis, diagnosis or treatment (i.e. not a known unsafe dose)

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3
Q

How many inpatients suffer ADRs?

A

Around 10-20% (1/10th to 1/5th) of inpatients suffer an ADR

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4
Q

How many hospital deaths are due to ADRs?

A

0.2-3% of hospital deaths are due to ADRs
(roughly 5-10k deaths/yr)

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5
Q

How many hospital admissions are ADR related?

A

6.5% of hospital admissions are related to ADRs

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6
Q

What are the 3 time periods of ADRs?

A

Acute
Sub-Acute
Latent

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7
Q

How quickly does an acute ADR occur?

A

Within an hour of administration

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8
Q

How quickly does a sub-acute ADR occur?

A

1-24 hours after administration.
Basicall within a day

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9
Q

How long does a latent ADR take to manifest?

A

Greater than 2 days before the ADR occurs makes it a latent ADR

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10
Q

What are the 3 levels of ADR?

A

Mild
Moderate
Severe

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11
Q

Define a mild ADR?

A

ITs bothersome to the patient but they dont need to change treatmetn

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12
Q

Define a moderate ADR?

A

Pateint either needs hospitalization, changed treatment or additional treatment to solve it.

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13
Q

How bad is a severe ADR?

A

Disabling or life-threatening

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14
Q

How are ADRs categorised?

A

Into Types A-F

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15
Q

What do the types of ADR stand for?

A

Augmented
Bizarre
Chronic
Delayed
End of Treatment
Failure of Treatment

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16
Q

Why are Type A ADRs called augmented?

A

They are a normal repsonse to a the drug but augmented (exaggeratd)

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17
Q

Example of Type A ADRs?

A

Beta blockers causing bradycardia
Insulin causing hypoglycaemia

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18
Q

Are type A ADRs predictable?

A

Type A adrs are predictable & related to dosage

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19
Q

What cause a type A ADR?

A

Excess pharmacological action.

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20
Q

What causes excess pharmacological action in a TYpe A ADR?

A

Too high a dose
Pharmaceutical Variation
Pharmacokinetic Variation
Pharmacodynamic Variation

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21
Q

What 4 aspects of a pateint make up their pharmacokinetic variation?

A

Theyre drug:
Absorption
Distribution
Metabolism
Elimination

22
Q

What 4 factors affect drug absorption?

A

The dose
The drugs formulation
GI motility
First pass metabolism

23
Q

What effects drug metabolism?

A

altered hepatic function.

24
Q

In what type of drus is liver disease a particularly important consideration?

A

Those with a narrow therapeutic range

25
What effects drug elimination?
Altered renal function, particularly reduced GLomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)
26
How does pharmacogenetics trigger Type A ADRs?
10% of people are slow metabolizers making them prone to drug toxicity due to their lower first pass metabolism.
27
What effects pharmacodynamic variation?
- Natural variability between individuals - Disease states (particularly renal/hepatic disease)
28
Why are Type B ADRs called bizarrre?
Theyre unpredictable & rare
29
How serious can type B ADRs be?
Severe af, they can kill you
30
How are some Type B ADRs immunological?
Some TypeB ADRs are drug allergys, i.e. examples of type 1 hypersensitivity
31
What are TYPE C ADRs related to?
Dosage & treatment duration
32
example of a type C ADR?
Iatrogenic Cushing's disease
33
When does a TYPE D ADR occur?
Years after the treatment.
34
Whats unique about a Type D ADR?
Type D ADRs can occur in the pateints children
35
What sort of Type D ADRs can immunosuppresive agents cause?
Patients treated with immunosuppresive agents can develop secondary cancers
36
If a mother is treated with isotretinoin, what ADR can occur?
Mother given isotretinoin. Child born with craniofacial malformation Type D ADR
37
What ADR are thalidimide babies an example of?
Type D ADRs
38
When does a Type E ADR occur
When a treatment is stopped
39
Alcohol withdrawel is an example of what ADR?
Type E
40
What are some type E ADRs known as ?
Rebound phenomenom
41
what type E ADR can occur when beta blockers are stopped?
Beta blockers stopped Unstable Angina & myocardial infarction can occur
42
What type E ADR occurs when long term steroid are suddenyl stoppped?
Sudden stop of long term steroid treatment can cause addisonian crisis
43
What frequently causes Type F ADRs?
Drug interaction
44
Is dose related to Type F ADR?
Yes dose influences type F ADRs
45
What are the 4 steps for diangosing an ADR?
- Differential Diagnosis - Medication history - Asses time of onset & dose relationship - Lab investigations
46
What lab investiations are used to diagnose an ADR?
Plasma conc. measurments Allergy tests
47
What is step 2 of ADR diagnosis?
Medication History
48
Whats step 3 of ADR diagnosis?
Assessing the relationship between dose & time of onset
49
Whats step 1 of diagnosing an ADR?
Differential diagnosis
50
Whats step 4 of ADR diagnosis?
Lab tests
51
How are ADRs reported?
To the yellow card scheme
52
What does the yellow card scheme collect info on?
ADRs (side effects) Defective Meds Counterfeit meds Medical device incidents