Institutionen för laboratoriemedicin / Department of Laboratory Medicine
Abstract
ABSTRACT
There is a lack of paediatric documentation concerning efficacy and
safety of many
drugs, which contribute to drug use outside the terms of the product
license (off-label).
In the present thesis, four studies (I-IV), using different settings and
design to evaluate
pharmacological treatment in children, with focus on off-label drug use,
is presented.
Outpatient records of purchased prescriptions were retrieved to
investigate the
frequency and characteristics of paediatric off-label prescribing (I). In
Stockholm, 1.8
prescribed drugs per child were purchased in the year 2000. Every fifth
drug was
classified as an off-label prescription. The proportion of off-label
prescriptions was
highest for topical drugs, due to lack of paediatric information.
A survey of all adverse drug reaction reports to the Medical Products
Agency
concerning paediatric outpatients in the year 2000 was performed, to
investigate the
frequency of off-label drug prescribing (II). One hundred and twelve
paediatric cases,
corresponding to 158 adverse reactions were reported. One third of the
reports were
regarded as serious, and these were more often associated with off-label
drug
prescribing. Antiasthmatic drugs were most commonly reported. Psychiatric
symptoms
were the most commonly reported adverse drug reactions.
Paediatric questions and answers to a Drug Information Centre in
Stockholm were
retrieved and analysed regarding off-label drug use and paediatric
literature information
adding to the labelling of the drug (III). During a 10-year period, 249
paediatric
questions were handled. Every third question concerned off-label
treatment, often
concerning psychotropic drugs. In every other response to off-label
questions,
additional paediatric documentation concerning the drug was found in the
literature.
In a prospective, nation-wide, cross-sectional study, paediatric
prescriptions and offlabel
drug use to children at hospitals in Sweden were analysed (IV). Enrolment
of
more than 200 hospital departments resulted in data from 2947 paediatric
patients, that
received altogether11294 prescriptions within two two-day-periods in
2008. Half of all
administered prescriptions concerned either off-label drug use or
unlicensed or
extemporaneously prepared drugs. Paracetamol was the most common drug
used both
on- and off-label. Absence of paediatric information was the main reason
for the large
proportion of off-label prescribing of carbohydrates and electrolytes in
hospitals.
This thesis has demonstrated substantial off-label prescribing to
children in both
primary and hospital health care. A common reason for this is the lack of
paediatric
documentation. Children have the same right as adults to well documented
and safe
drug therapy. Therefore, it is necessary to improve paediatric
documentation through
harmonization of existing scientific knowledge and clinical experience,
improved
structure of SPC information, and more appropriate administration forms.
Furthermore, the documentation of drug treatment and its outcomes,
including the
reporting of adverse drug reactions, need to be improved