November 2007
Most children in hospitals receive drugs not approved for kids
Nearly four out of
five hospitalized children receive medications that have been tested and
approved only for adults, according to a study of hundreds of thousands of
patient records. This so‑called "off‑label" use of drugs was thought to be
especially common in children, and the new research, the largest‑ever US
pediatric study, confirms this.
"We measured the
magnitude of off‑label use of drugs in children," said study leader Samir S.
Shah, MD, a pediatrician specializing in infectious diseases at The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "Given the nature of the available
data, we could not evaluate safety and effectiveness of those medications,
although those are important concerns. However, only a small number of drugs
have been formally tested in children."
"With nearly 80
percent of children receiving off‑label medications during hospitalizations,
we need to focus our attention on the process by which medications are
approved for pediatrics," said senior author Anthony D. Slonim, MD,
executive director of the Center for Clinical Effectiveness at Children's
National Medical Center. "It is imperative that we thoroughly review this
process to ensure that children are being treated with the safest, most
effective therapies."
Researchers in the
Pediatric Health Information Systems Research Group, representing various
medical centers, analyzed patient records from 31 major U.S. children's
hospitals for the entire year of 2004. At least one drug was used off‑label
in 79 percent of the more than 355,000 children requiring hospitalization.
Off‑label use accounted for $270 million, some 40 percent, of the total
dollars spent on children's medication in the study, which appears in the
March issue of the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.
Off‑label
prescribing is relatively common among adult patients as well, but it has
long been recognized that a large proportion of drugs used in pediatrics
have never been tested in children. Over the past decade, federal
regulations providing financial incentives to pharmaceutical companies have
helped increase the number of drugs tested and approved for children.
However, said Dr. Shah, "there was little information on the extent of
off‑label use among children, the types of drugs used off‑label, and the
characteristics of hospitalized children receiving those drugs."
All previous studies
of off‑label drug use in hospitalized children were performed outside the
United States, often limited to specific conditions or to patients in single
medical centers. This current study focused on 90 drugs that were either
administered frequently to children or were recommended for further
pediatric study by the FDA.
The drugs most
likely to be used off‑label in children were those approved for use on the
central nervous system or autonomic nervous system, in addition to nutrients
and gastrointestinal agents. For instance, 28 percent of the patients in the
database received morphine, although the FDA has not approved it for use in
children. Anti‑cancer drugs were the least likely to be used off‑label,
possibly because such drugs are more likely to have been tested in pediatric
cancer patients, who frequently participate in clinical trials.
Children were more
likely to receive drugs off‑label if they underwent surgery, were older than
28 days and had more severe illnesses. "Critically ill children may have
failed to respond to conventional therapies and may receive drugs off‑label
because they have no approved options," said Shah.
The authors point
out that, while physicians may sometimes have no alternatives to treating
children with off‑label medications, the practice is not risk‑free. "Using
drugs that have been insufficiently studied in children has contributed to
adverse outcomes, which have been documented in the medical literature,"
said Shah. "We hope that by better defining the magnitude of off‑label drug
use, our study may help encourage greater cooperation among industry,
academia and government in carrying out studies to better protect children."
Source:
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia