药物警戒                        
                
                                
                        
                            背景(考古学)                        
                
                                
                        
                            因果关系(物理学)                        
                
                                
                        
                            梅德林                        
                
                                
                        
                            药物不良反应                        
                
                                
                        
                            医学                        
                
                                
                        
                            授权                        
                
                                
                        
                            计算机科学                        
                
                                
                        
                            不利影响                        
                
                                
                        
                            药品                        
                
                                
                        
                            药理学                        
                
                                
                        
                            生物                        
                
                                
                        
                            政治学                        
                
                                
                        
                            物理                        
                
                                
                        
                            古生物学                        
                
                                
                        
                            法学                        
                
                                
                        
                            量子力学                        
                
                                
                        
                            计算机安全                        
                
                        
                    
            作者
            
                Pallavi Pradhan,Maude Lavallée,Samuel Akinola,Fernanda Raphael Escobar Gimenes,Anick Bérard,Julie Méthot,Marie‐Ève Piché,Jennifer Midiani Gonella,Lyne Cloutier,Jacinthe Leclerc            
         
                    
        
    
            
            标识
            
                                    DOI:10.32725/jab.2023.010
                                    
                                
                                 
         
        
                
            摘要
            
            The core motive of pharmacovigilance is the detection and prevention of adverse drug reactions (ADRs), to improve the risk-benefit balance of the drug. However, the causality assessment of ADRs remains a major challenge among clinicians, and none of the available tools of causality assessment used for assessing ADRs have been universally accepted.To provide an up-to-date overview of the different causality assessment tools.We conducted electronic searches in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane database. The eligibility of each tool was screened by three reviewers. Each eligible tool was then scrutinized for its domains (the reported specific set of questions/areas used for calculating the likelihood of cause-and-effect relation of an ADR) to discover the most comprehensive tool. Finally, we subjectively assessed the tool's ease-of-use in a Canadian, Indian, Hungarian, and Brazilian clinical context.Twenty-one eligible causality assessment tools were retrieved. Naranjo's tool and De Boer's tool appeared the most comprehensive among all the tools, covering 10 domains each. Regarding "ease-of-use" in a clinical setting, we judged that many tools were hard to implement in a clinical context because of their complexity and/or lengthiness. Naranjo's tool, Jones's tool, Danan and Benichou's tool, and Hsu and Stoll's tool appeared to be the easiest to implement into various clinical contexts.Among the many tools identified, 1981 Naranjo's scale remains the most comprehensive and easy to use for performing causality assessment of ADRs. Upcoming analysis should compare the performance of each ADR tool in clinical settings.
         
            
 
                 
                
                    
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