Key Points
- ADRs are unintended, harmful events caused by medicines and contribute to many unscheduled hospital admissions.
- A careful medication history helps identify previous ADRs that could preclude re-exposure.
- Prevention depends on avoiding treatment in susceptible patients and using therapeutic plans that reduce risk.
- Spontaneous reporting (e.g., Yellow Card Scheme) is crucial but underused. Always report if in doubt.
Introduction
An Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) is defined as "a response to a medicinal product that is noxious and unintended". ADRs range from minor symptoms to life-altering events, often leading to hospital admission, prolonged stay, morbidity, and increased costs. Diagnosis is challenging as ADRs can mimic underlying diseases or go unrecognized.
Studies in Europe show ADRs cause 0.5–12.8% of acute hospital admissions, with 1.7–50.9% of inpatients experiencing an ADR during admission.
Classification of Adverse Drug Reactions
Traditionally, ADRs are classified as:
- Type A (Augmented): Predictable based on drug pharmacology.
- Type B (Bizarre): Unpredictable, often idiosyncratic.
An alternative classification is DoTS (Dose-relatedness, Time course, Susceptibility).
Dose-relatedness
All pharmacological effects are dose-related. Subclasses include:
- Hypersusceptibility reactions: Occur at very low doses in susceptible individuals (e.g., anaphylaxis).
- Collateral effects: Occur at standard therapeutic doses.
- Toxic effects: Occur with high doses, reduced elimination, or drug interactions.
Time Course
ADRs can be:
- Time-independent: Can occur anytime during treatment (e.g., bleeding with warfarin).
- Time-dependent: Occur at characteristic times (e.g., anaphylaxis shortly after first dose, delayed hypersensitivity after 10 days–10 weeks).
- Delayed reactions: Occur long after treatment ends (e.g., second cancers years after alkylating agents).
Susceptibility
Risk varies with age, renal function, genetics, ethnicity, pregnancy, comorbidities, and concomitant drugs. Pharmacogenetics (drug–gene interactions) helps predict susceptibility (e.g., CYP2D6 poor metabolizers, HLA-B*57:01 with abacavir).
Detection and Diagnosis
Causality is often assessed via temporal relationship, de-challenge (resolution on stopping), and re-challenge (recurrence on restarting). Tools like the Naranjo algorithm exist but are more useful in research than individual cases.
Post-marketing surveillance systems (e.g., Yellow Card Scheme, prescription-event monitoring) are vital for detecting ADRs not seen in clinical trials.
Preventing Adverse Drug Reactions
Many ADRs are preventable through:
- Identifying susceptible subgroups (using pharmacogenetics, patient history).
- Modifying treatment plans to mitigate risks (e.g., co-prescribing folic acid with methotrexate, monitoring electrolytes with diuretics).
- Safe prescribing and patient-centred communication about risks and monitoring.
Common and Important ADRs (Examples)
| Drug-induced Disorder | Examples of Causative Drugs | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Oxidative haemolysis | Primaquine, dapsone | G6PD deficiency |
| Myopathy | Statins (simvastatin, atorvastatin) | SLCO1B1 polymorphism increases muscle uptake |
| Stevens–Johnson syndrome / Toxic epidermal necrolysis | Abacavir, allopurinol, carbamazepine | Associated with HLA genotypes (e.g., HLA-B*57:01, HLA-B*15:02) |
| QT prolongation / Torsade de pointes | Amiodarone, erythromycin, citalopram, haloperidol | Drug-induced repolarization abnormality; risk increased with hypomagnesemia/hypokalemia |
| Serotonin syndrome | SSRIs, linezolid, tramadol | Excessive serotonin activity |
| Ketoacidosis (euglycaemic) | SGLT2 inhibitors (canagliflozin, dapagliflozin) | Increased lipolysis and ketogenesis despite normal glucose |
Drug Interactions
Interactions can occur between drugs, herbs, and foods, leading to altered efficacy or toxicity. Categories include:
- Pharmaceutical (in vitro): Outside the body (e.g., IV incompatibility).
- Pharmacokinetic (in vivo): Affect absorption, distribution, metabolism, elimination.
- Pharmacodynamic (in vivo): Additive/synergistic or antagonistic effects.
Food–Drug & Drug–Herb Interactions
| Type | Substance | Drug/Class | Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Food–Drug | Food (any) | Rifampicin, iron, penicillin | Reduced absorption |
| Food–Drug | Leafy vegetables (high vitamin K) | Warfarin | Diminished anticoagulant effect |
| Drug–Herb | St John’s wort | Ciclosporin, warfarin, antidepressants | Induces CYP enzymes → reduced drug levels |
| Drug–Herb | Ginkgo, garlic, ginger | Warfarin | Increased anticoagulant effect (bleeding risk) |