Objective: To assess drug use and the incidence of mild to moderate adverse
drug effects (A-E) in children aged 0-16 years, with 2 different approache
s. Methods: kll 185 pediatric practices in the State of Brandenburg, German
y, were surveyed (95% positive response). A random sample of 50 practices s
ervicing 36,000 children participated in the study as sentinel physicians r
eporting any AE among their patients. Twenty practices servicing 14,000 chi
ldren were included in a drug utilization component (DUC) which documented
diagnoses, prescribing and AE in all children seen in a 3-month period. Res
ults: The results on the DUC are based on 12,628 children with 26,168 physi
cian contacts, 34,465 diagnoses and 33,140 drug prescriptions given to 85%
of the children seen (average age: 6.7 years). Practice size ranged from 94
to 1473 children seen in a 3-month period. The average number of physician
contacts per child was 2.1, with 10% seeing a physician 5 times and more.
The diagnoses were respiratory ailments (30%), skin- (12%), injection- (11%
) and trauma- (10%) related diagnoses. Major drug uses were respiratory (34
% of prescriptions), anti-infective (22%), dermatological (13%), gastrointe
stinal (9%) and psychotropic agents (8%). One hundred and fifty-two AE affe
cting 150 children were documented in the DUC, 60% of these occurring withi
n 3 days after treatment initiation. 83% of AE were mild (up to 4 on a scal
e from 1-6), and 85% were considered by physicians to be attributable. Only
4 reports of very severe events were received. 47% of reports were related
to antibiotic uses, 31% to immunizations, 11% to respiratory, and 4% to ga
strointestinal agents. While there are no differences in the occurrence of
A-E by gender, A-E decreases significantly by age, maintaining the same pat
terns of AE type and causative medication. Over a 3-month period, the incid
ence of mild to moderate ADR in children given medications is estimated as
1,2100 per 100,000, or about 1%. Conclusions: Underreporting of AE remains
an issue even when a monitoring scheme suggests compliance. The results of
this study show that while A-E in children are generally non-serious, 1% of
treatments might elicit mild AE leading to a consultation. Direct practice
recording produces more reports than a sentinel system.