A cost-analysis of suspected adverse drug reactions in a hospital emergency ward

Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 1999 Dec;8(7):529-34. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1557(199912)8:7<529::AID-PDS460>3.0.CO;2-J.

Abstract

The main objective of this study was to analyse the minimum direct cost to the Public Health System (PHS) of diagnosing and treating those patients attended to in the emergency ward (EW) for suspected adverse drug reaction (ADR). The cases were collected during March 1995 in the emergency ward of a 900-bed tertiary teaching hospital that covers 900,000 inhabitants. ADR was considered according to the WHO definition. The following EW costs were used: EW physician visit 78.5 ecus (1 ecu=156 pesetas), thorax or abdomen radiograph 21.5 ecus, computerized tomography 112.7 ecus, endoscopy 48 ecus, specialist physician visit 62 ecus. Three types of laboratory costs were considered: block of biochemical tests 16 ecus, biochemical tests with blood count 22.5 ecus, and biochemical tests with blood count and coagulation study 41.6 ecus. Pharmacotherapy of the ADR and changes in patient's usual drug therapy due to ADR were estimated. For patients admitted in the hospital, a per day cost of 391 ecus was considered. A mean ADR cost per organ or system affected (cutaneous, metabolic, gastrointestinal, nervous) was computed. The main conclusion of this study is that ADR, apart from inflicting damage on the patients, also incur PHS costs. The quantity of 42,732 ecus during the month of March, in a single hospital, can seem small when compared with the cost of some diseases such as AIDS or ischemic heart disease. But remembering that about 40% of all ADR attended to in hospitals is avoidable, a decrease of 40% could produce an annual saving of 205,216 ecus to the hospital, which is twice the annual budget of the Pharmacovigilance Centre of the Basque Country. Pharmacovigilance centres should include cost analysis of ADR among their objectives, to provide health systems managers with enough information to implement those measures that will result in a better utilization of the scarce resources of the Public Health System.