Polypharmacy in Children with Medical Complexity: A Cross-Sectional Study in a Pediatric Palliative Care Center

Title

Polypharmacy in Children with Medical Complexity: A Cross-Sectional Study in a Pediatric Palliative Care Center

Creator

Zanin A; Baratiri F; Roverato B; Mengato D; Pivato L; Avagnina I; Maghini I; Divisic A; Rusalen F; Agosto C; Venturini F; Benini F

Publisher

Children

Date

2024

Subject

palliative therapy; polypharmacy; adolescent; adult; analgesia; article; caregiver; caregiver burden; child; cross-sectional study; drug cost; drug safety; eye drops; female; human; infant; male; nose spray; observational study; off label drug use; pediatrics; pharmacoeconomics; prevalence; quality of life; questionnaire; special situation for pharmacovigilance; typographical error

Description

Background: Children with medical complexity (CMC) often require multiple medications, leading to polypharmacy, which seems to be linked to adverse effects, administration errors, and increased caregiver burden. This study aimed to describe the prevalence of polypharmacy, medication burden, off-label drug use, and associated costs. <br/>Method(s): Conducted at the Pediatric Palliative Care Center of Padua, Italy, from August to October 2021, this cross-sectional observational study included patients up to 23 years old with at least one prescribed drug. Data were collected from medical records and caregiver interviews. Drug costs were collected from the Italian Medicine Agency. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed. For comparisons among categorical variables, the Chi-square test was used, and for those among continuous variables, the ANOVA test was used. <br/>Result(s): This study analyzed treatment regimens of 169 patients with a median age of 12.5 years (0.3-23). Polypharmacy was present in 52.7% of patients, and medication burden was observed in 44.4%, both varying significantly by primary diagnosis (p < 0.001). The median daily cost per patient was EUR 2.2 (IQR 0.9-7.1), with significant variation among subgroups. Only 34.6% of prescriptions were off-label. <br/>Conclusion(s): polypharmacy and medication burden are frequent among our CMC population, with some differences according to primary diagnosis.<br/>Copyright &#xa9; 2024 by the authors.

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation List Month

October List 2024

Collection

Citation

Zanin A; Baratiri F; Roverato B; Mengato D; Pivato L; Avagnina I; Maghini I; Divisic A; Rusalen F; Agosto C; Venturini F; Benini F, “Polypharmacy in Children with Medical Complexity: A Cross-Sectional Study in a Pediatric Palliative Care Center,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed March 22, 2025, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/19756.