Introduction
Changes in drug treatment are frequently mandatory with hospital admission and discharge because hospital drug formularies
are generally restricted to about 3000 drugs as compared to the many times this number – 62,000 in Germany – that are commercially
available. Without computerised support, the process involved with switching drugs to a corresponding generic or a therapeutic
equivalent is time-consuming and error-prone.
Methods
We have developed and tested a standardised interchange algorithm for subsequent implementation into a computerised decision
support system that switches drugs to the corresponding generic or a therapeutic equivalent if they are not listed on the
hospital drug formulary.
Results
The algorithm was retrospectively applied to the medication regimens of 120 patients (774 prescribed drugs containing 886
active ingredients) at their time of admission to surgical wards. Of the prescribed drugs, 52.8% (409/774) were part of the
hospital drug formulary, thereby rendering a switch unnecessary. The 365 drugs not listed consisted of 392 active ingredients
that were successfully switched to a corresponding generic (84.7%) or a therapeutic equivalent (10.2%). No specific switching
procedures were defined for only 2.3% (20/886) of the active ingredients. In these cases, the drugs were either discontinued
(4/20) or special drug classes, current diseases or co-medication required manual switching (8/20), or the drugs were continued
unchanged and ordered from a wholesaler (8/20).
Conclusion
Using a standardised interchange algorithm, pre-admission drug regimens can successfully be switched to drugs on a hospital
drug formulary. These findings suggest that a computerised decision support system will likely be useful to support this important
practice.
Keywords Computerised decision support system - Drug switching - Health care interfaces - Hospital drug formulary - Generic/therapeutic equivalent - Interchange algorithm