Zahra Niazkhani, Mahsa Fereidoni, Parviz Rashidi Khazaee, Afshin Shiva, Khadijeh Makhdoomi, Andrew Georgiou & Habibollah Pirnejad

Translation of evidence into kidney transplant clinical practice: managing drug-lab interactions by a context-aware clinical decision support system



2020, BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, volume 20, Article number: 196 [Citation Link]

Drug-laboratory (lab) interactions (DLIs) are a common source of preventable medication errors. Clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) are promising tools to decrease such errors by improving prescription quality in terms of lab values. However, alert fatigue counteracts their impact. We aimed to develop a novel user-friendly, evidence-based, clinical context-aware CDSS to alert nephrologists about DLIs clinically important lab values in prescriptions of kidney recipients. For the most frequently prescribed medications identified by a prospective cross-sectional study in a kidney transplant clinic, DLI-rules were extracted using main pharmacology references and clinical inputs from clinicians. A CDSS was then developed linking a computerized prescription system and lab records. The system performance was tested using data of both fictitious and real patients. The &ldquoQuestionnaire for User Interface Satisfaction&rdquo was used to measure user satisfaction of the human-computer interface. Among 27 study medications, 17 needed adjustments regarding renal function, 15 required considerations based on hepatic function, 8 had drug-pregnancy interactions, and 13 required baselines or follow-up lab monitoring. Using IF & THEN rules and the contents of associated alert, a DLI-alerting CDSS was designed. To avoid alert fatigue, the alert appearance was considered as interruptive only when medications with serious risks were contraindicated or needed to be discontinued or adjusted. Other alerts appeared in a non-interruptive mode with visual clues on the prescription window for easy, intuitive notice. When the system was used for real 100 patients &hellip




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