Why is it important to ask a patient about allergies before giving a medication?

Review

  • Laura Légat1*, MSc ; 
  • Sven Van Laere2*, MSc ; 
  • Marc Nyssen2, PhD ; 
  • Stephane Steurbaut1, PhD ; 
  • Alain G Dupont1, PhD ; 
  • Pieter Cornu1, PhD 

1Research Group Clinical Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Centre for Pharmaceutical Research, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium

2Research Group of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, Department of Public Health, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium

*these authors contributed equally

Corresponding Author:

Pieter Cornu, PhD

Research Group Clinical Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy

Centre for Pharmaceutical Research

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Laarbeeklaan 103

Brussels, 1090

Belgium

Phone: 32 24766432

Email:


Abstract

Background: Worldwide, the burden of allergies—in particular, drug allergies—is growing. In the process of prescribing, dispensing, or administering a drug, a medication error may occur and can have adverse consequences; for example, a drug may be given to a patient with a documented allergy to that particular drug. Computerized physician order entry (CPOE) systems with built-in clinical decision support systems (CDSS) have the potential to prevent such medication errors and adverse events.

Objective: The aim of this review is to provide a comprehensive overview regarding all aspects of CDSS for drug allergy, including documenting, coding, rule bases, alerts and alert fatigue, and outcome evaluation.

Methods: The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed as much as possible and searches were conducted in 5 databases using CPOE, CDSS, alerts, and allergic or allergy as keywords. Bias could not be evaluated according to PRISMA guidelines due to the heterogeneity of study types included in the review.

Results: Of the 3160 articles considered, 60 met the inclusion criteria. A further 9 articles were added based on expert opinion, resulting in a total of 69 articles. An interrater agreement of 90.9% with a reliability Κ=.787 (95% CI 0.686-0.888) was reached. Large heterogeneity across study objectives, study designs, study populations, and reported results was found. Several key findings were identified. Evidence of the usefulness of clinical decision support for drug allergies has been documented. Nevertheless, there are some important problems associated with their use. Accurate and structured documenting of information on drug allergies in electronic health records (EHRs) is difficult, as it is often not clear to healthcare providers how and where to document drug allergies. Besides the underreporting of drug allergies, outdated or inaccurate drug allergy information in EHRs poses an important problem. Research on the use of coding terminologies for documenting drug allergies is sparse. There is no generally accepted standard terminology for structured documentation of allergy information. The final key finding is the consistently reported low specificity of drug allergy alerts. Current systems have high alert override rates of up to 90%, leading to alert fatigue. Important challenges remain for increasing the specificity of drug allergy alerts. We found only one study specifically reporting outcomes related to CDSS for drug allergies. It showed that adverse drug events resulting from overridden drug allergy alerts do not occur frequently.

Conclusions: Accurate and comprehensive recording of drug allergies is required for good use of CDSS for drug allergy screening. We found considerable variation in the way drug allergy are recorded in EHRs. It remains difficult to reduce drug allergy alert overload while maintaining patient safety as the highest priority. Future research should focus on improving alert specificity, thereby reducing override rates and alert fatigue. Also, the effect on patient outcomes and cost-effectiveness should be evaluated.

J Med Internet Res 2018;20(9):e258

doi:10.2196/jmir.8206

Keywords



Introduction

Worldwide, the burden of allergies is growing—in particular, drug allergies (DAs) are becoming increasingly common []. DAs can be categorized as abnormal immunoglobulin E-mediated reactions (eg, anaphylaxis) or delayed, nonimmunoglobulin E-mediated reactions, which are generally less severe (eg, intolerances) [].

DAs are perceived as an important problem. In a study conducted by the European Network on Drug Allergy and the EAACI Drug Allergy Interest group, 10% of parents reported that their child was allergic to a drug []. A study in a tertiary care academic medical center in Chicago reported a DA prevalence of 25% in the general adult population []. Looking at the clinical investigations of suspected reactions, the results demonstrate that these numbers are overvalued []. In a general hospital in Singapore, the estimated incidence of DAs was 4.20 per 1000 hospitalizations (95% CI 2.93-5.46) and the estimated mortality attributable to DA was 0.09 per 1000 hospitalizations (95% CI 0.06-0.12) []. A study in a university hospital in Korea reported an estimated incidence of drug hypersensitivity reactions of 1.8 per 1000 hospital admissions [].

In the process of prescribing, dispensing, or administering a drug, a medication error can occur and may have adverse consequences, for example, when a drug is given to a patient with a documented DA to this particular drug []. Only a minority (0.25%) of these medication errors result in an adverse drug event (ADE), but allergic reactions represent an important cause of preventable ADEs caused by medication errors [,]. It was estimated that 12.1% of all medication errors with the potential for an ADE arise from incomplete or incorrect allergy documentation [].

Bates et al [] and Classen et al [] estimated that each ADE resulted in a prolonged length of hospital stay of 2.2 and 1.7 days, respectively. Looking more specifically at penicillin allergy, Macy et al [] demonstrated that in the Kaiser Foundation Hospitals in Southern California, 0.59 additional hospital days (95% CI 0.47-0.71) per hospitalization resulted in an extra cost of US $1252.90 in 2012.

CPOE systems with built-in CDS have the potential to prevent such medication errors and consequent ADEs [-]. When a prescription poses a threat to the patient, the clinical decision support system (CDSS) warns the user by providing an alert message. However, it is well known that current CDSS for DA checking are impaired by alert fatigue caused by low alert specificity [-].

Several systematic reviews have been conducted to evaluate CPOE and CDSS in general or in specific domains of clinical care such as pediatrics [-,-]. To the best of our knowledge, no systematic review has been conducted focusing specifically on CDSS for DA. In this systematic review, we aimed to provide a comprehensive overview of all aspects of CDSS for DA including documenting, coding, rule bases, alerts and alert fatigue, and outcome evaluation.


Methods

Search Strategy

A systematic literature review was performed following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines for systematic reviews and meta-analyses [] as much as possible. Bias could not be evaluated according to the PRISMA guidelines due to the heterogeneity of study types included in the review. Here, we focused on searching for articles related to CDSS and associated alerts in the domain of DAs. We performed searches in the bibliographic libraries of Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Cochrane Library, Embase, Ovid, and PubMed from database inception up to February 2016. The search strategy for the 5 databases is provided in . Because the aim of the review was to provide a broad overview of all aspects of DA-related CDSS, reviews and conference proceedings were also included. Only English language papers were included. Additional publications of interest that included information relevant to this review were included based on expert opinion. Our search strategy is presented in . The terms “Computerized Physician Order Entry” (CPOE) and “Clinical Decision Support System” (CDSS) were combined with the term “alert.” These terms were combined with the term “allergic” or “allergy” to limit the scope to the allergy field.

Study Selection

The titles and abstracts of identified articles were independently screened by two researchers (LL and SVL) to assess inclusion in the full review (). If one or both reviewers selected the paper for further evaluation, we included the article for full assessment. Articles were included for analysis if the study involved at least one of the following: (1) prevalence of allergy alerts; (2) coding or documenting of DA information; (3) implementation of a CDSS for DA; (4) perceptions of care providers on CDS for DAs; or (5) alert acceptance and interface design in the domain of allergies. Disagreements were discussed with a third reviewer (PC) until consensus was reached.

Data Extraction

From each article included, the two researchers (LL and SVL) extracted predefined information including the author names, year of publication, main topic of the paper, aim of the study, study design, number of subjects (care providers, alerts, etc), and key findings. The third reviewer (PC) evaluated the extracted data, and disagreements were resolved by consensus.

Why is it important to ask a patient about allergies before giving a medication?
Figure 1. Search strategy used for navigating the 5 libraries (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Cochrane, Embase, Ovid, and MEDLINE). The matching search terms are listed in the lower part of the figure. CDSS: clinical decision support system; CPOE: Computerized Physician Order Entry. View this figure‎
Why is it important to ask a patient about allergies before giving a medication?
Figure 2. Search strategy (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses), with reasons for exclusion and inclusion of articles added based on expert opinion. CDS: clinical decision support; CINAHL: Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; CPOE: computerized physician order entry systems; NLP: natural language processing. View this figure

Assessment of risk of bias was not conducted because the heterogeneity in the quantitative and qualitative study designs, reviews, and reports did not allow for a comprehensive and consistent evaluation of bias.


Results

Study Selection and Reviewer Agreement

We started the study with 3160 articles from 5 different literary sources (). After the removal of duplicates (725 duplicates), 2435 articles remained for title and abstract review. Eventually, 186 articles were included for full text review, of which 60 were included in this review. The interrater reliability between LL and SVL was calculated using Cohen’s kappa. An interrater agreement of 90.9% with a reliability of Κ=.787 (95% CI 0.686-0.888) was reached between the two reviewers. Additionally, 9 articles were added based on expert opinion, resulting in a total selection of 69 articles. Although these 9 articles were not retrieved by the search query, they reported on aspects relevant for this review, including information related to the coding of allergy information, reporting of DAs, and strategies for improving CPOE alerts. These articles were identified by PC from automatic weekly updates on PubMed (My NCBI). These weekly updates were based on separate queries with individual key words including “Computerized Physician Order Entry,” “Clinical Decision Support,” “Medication error,” and “Drug allergy.” PC collected and indexed relevant articles from this weekly list using reference manager software over the years. Articles included in the library of the reference software that dealt with relevant topics but were not discovered via the search queries were included.

Study Characteristics

The names of the authors, year of publication, study design, aim of the study, and key findings are shown in . Papers in are organized by topic [,,-,,-]. Papers belonging to different topics are categorized in all corresponding topics. In , a table with the number of subjects included in the study can be found. Most studies (56/69, 81%) were published after 2005. The 69 studies consisted of 28 observational studies (23 retrospective studies, 2 cross-sectional studies, 1 prospective time series analysis, 1 prospective study with interviews, and 1 cohort study), 13 review articles, 8 practice experiences, 6 before-after studies, 3 surveys, 3 controlled trials (1 randomized controlled trial, 1 randomized crossover study, and 1 nonrandomized controlled trial), 2 economic evaluations, 2 focus group studies, 1 scenario-based simulation study, 1 study describing a draft for an algorithm to classify information automatically, 1 study discussing a workshop, and 1 study describing a comparative study on standards in the DA field.

Documenting the Presence or Absence of an Allergy

For a functional CDSS, accurate and consistent documentation of patient allergy information is necessary. Currently, there is no agreement about what needs to be recorded and how to do so []. In 1964, Mills addressed the importance of capturing information on allergies and drugs, proposing a new checklist that served as a guideline in hospitals []. A similar initiative was taken more recently by Burrell et al [], who introduced a pharmacist-driven protocol in a hospital to improve the completeness of DA or intolerance documentation. A review of medical notes in a general district hospital demonstrated poor documentation practices where 97.4% (114/117) of drug allergy boxes were only partially completed and 2.6% (3/117) had nothing documented []. In another analysis comparing two oncology wards, one ward showed 100% consistency, while the other ward demonstrated drug charts with allergy entries in 82.4% of cases, of which only 68.8% corresponded to information in the medical notes []. Failure to accurately document DAs may lead to prescribing and administering medications that could be harmful to the patient. Besides accurate documentation, correct patient identification with linking of medication information with patient DA information, for example wristband barcoding, is required for real-time CDS [].

Lopez-Gonzalez et al [] reviewed factors for not reporting ADRs and found that the most prominent factor associated with underreporting was ignorance based on the fact that physicians often think that only severe ADRs need to be reported. Secondary factors, such as the hierarchical nature of hospital culture combined with stressful working conditions, also contributed to prescribing errors []. Moreover, at the time of documenting, there is often no clear distinction between a real allergy-related ADR and other minor reactions [].

Inaccurate or outdated DA information can also be a factor that influences the functioning of a CPOE system with CDS. Rimawi et al [] observed a small use case (150 patients) that was documented as intolerant to penicillin even though a negative penicillin skin test was observed. Of these, 36% (20/55) patients who revisited the medical center within the year were redocumented as having a penicillin allergy without proper indication.

Porter et al [] demonstrated that without healthcare personnel re-asking and validating information, there is a significant risk of error at the decision step of ordering or prescribing medications. Additionally, side effects related to the drug’s primary pharmacological effect are sometimes misinterpreted and documented as DAs, resulting in inaccurate DA information.

The more complete and accurate DAs recorded in patients’ EHRs, the greater the potential of CPOE systems with CDS to improve patient safety and reduce medication-related costs [].

Coding

Information on how allergy data are structured or coded in EHRs is scarce. Slight et al [] recently stated that the US government has not yet specified what standard terminologies should be used to structure allergy information.

A first approach is to enter information concerning DAs in free text. In order to use free text information for CDSS, natural language processing is applied taking the context into consideration []. Currently, this technique is not widely used because of the difficult nature of natural language processing.

A review of the available literature indicates that different coding systems are used for documenting DA information in EHRs, including International Classification of Diseases (ICD) [,], Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine, Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT) [], RxNorm, and National Drug File-Reference Terminology (NDF-RT) []. Sometimes mapped coding schemes are used to add functionality. Benkhaial et al [] used the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical classification for mapping all drugs belonging to a specific ICD group. However, mapping might not always be this simple. Bernstein [] recently indicated in a Danish use case that there is not yet a clear consensus regarding the alert information concept (eg, drug alerts) and how drug allergy or other allergy subtypes are linked to that concept.

Goss et al [] performed a comparative study of the SNOMED CT, NDF-RT, Medication Dictionary for Regulatory Activities, unique ingredient identifier, and RxNorm standards for encoding allergy information. The qualitative part of their study demonstrated that SNOMED CT had the most desirable characteristics, including concept coverage, subset capabilities, and vocabulary structure. The quantitative part showed that RxNorm had the highest concept coverage to represent drug allergens, followed by unique ingredient identifier, SNOMED CT, NDF-RT, and Medication Dictionary for Regulatory Activities. SNOMED CT was the only coding system capable of representing unique concepts to encode ignorance of allergies.

The option to have an entry to indicate the ignorance of allergies is important for patient care because not documenting any DA information does not necessarily mean that there are no known DAs. Abookire et al [] stated that “every hospitalized patient should have DAs entered by the admitting physician (this is a forced entry; 'no allergies' may be entered).”

Rule Bases

In the literature, we observed underreporting of the rule bases used to support CDSS. Most CDSS for DA screening are knowledge-based systems supported by evidence-based rule databases. Some organizations use internally developed rule bases [], while others use vendor-supplied rule bases [].

We observed two types of CDSS in the literature: basic and complex. Basic CDSS provide alerts when a prescribed drug is listed in the patient’s DA list. In these systems, rules are implemented to screen for cross-reactivity within and between drug classes []. More complex CDSS use an inference mechanism to generate recommendations specific to a patient by integrating contextual information from the patient’s EHR (eg, previously tolerated administrations of the drug and results from DA tests) [].

As reported by Kuperman et al [], healthcare provider organizations ideally use a combination of vendor-supplied rule sets, which are developed by other organizations, and internally developed rules, which are derived from the literature and national and local consensus on what constitutes best practice. In any system, as medicine evolves and clinical knowledge grows, a timely review of the rule bases is warranted, for example using a Delphi approach to analyze what rules are useful [].

Alerts and Alert Fatigue

Alert fatigue has been defined as “declining physician responsiveness to a particular type of alert as the physician is repeatedly exposed to that alert over a period of time, gradually becoming ‘fatigued’ or desensitized to it” []. Alert fatigue caused by one type of alert may also lead to declined responsiveness to other types of CDS alerts (eg, drug-drug interaction, DDI, alerts). The state of the art in CDS for DA is such that alerts are not specific enough, resulting in high override rates [,]. Current systems, which generate an alert at the moment of prescribing, have very high override rates of over 90% [,]. The first concern regarding increasing DA alerting rates and overrides was raised by Abookire et al []. This problem has since been investigated in several other studies. Bryant et al [] retrospectively analyzed physician responses to DDI and DA interaction alerts in two university hospitals and reported high override rates in all categories, ie, 92.87% (2280/2455 alerts) in general and 90.86% (1183/1302 alerts) for DAs. No significant difference in override rates was observed between hospitals or between physicians-in-training and residents. Topaz et al [] demonstrated a significant increase in DA alert overrides from 83.3% in 2004 to 87.6% (P<.001) in 2013 in a retrospective longitudinal study of two large academic medical centers. Similarly, Lin et al [] demonstrated an increase in drug allergy override rates from 72 overrides out of 105 alerts (68.6%) in 2001 to 341 overrides out of 420 alerts (81.2%) in 2006.

In a recent observational study, Slight et al [] evaluated DA alerts generated over a 3-year period in a tertiary care teaching hospital and 36 primary care practices and found that in total, 81.10% (128,157/158,023) DA alerts in both settings were overridden. In a retrospective 5-month chart review study conducted by Genco et al [], a similar override rate of 87.4% (153/175) DA alerts was observed and the overall override rate for all types of alerts was 93.51% (12,829/13,719).

When an alert is overridden, analyzing the override reasons can help to understand the specific context. Several studies have reported the reasons frequently given for DA alert nonadherence, including (1) “medication was previously tolerated”; (2) “known DA for which only monitoring is needed”; (3) “the benefit outweighs the risk”; and (4) “alert considered not clinically important” [,,].

Besides evaluating override reasons, the underlying causes of high override rates should be investigated. Hsieh et al [] cited two important causes. The first cause is highly inclusive drug class and drug cross-reactivity mapping, which generates a large number of DA alerts for drugs with only minor potential to cause an allergic reaction. Alert acceptance is more likely when the warning is infrequently encountered [] and when the physician encounters an exact drug match instead of a drug class warning []. The second cause is difficulty maintaining accurate allergy lists because there may not be a clear distinction between immune-meditated allergies and nonimmune-mediated sensitivities, and there is no general consensus on whether both should be included in allergy lists []. The likelihood that alerts will be ignored is related to the low predictive value for allergic drug reactions and inaccurate alerts because of inconsistent information in medical records [,].

Strategies for improving alert specificity and acceptance have been proposed. Horsky et al [] stated that the specificity and contextual relevance of alerts can be increased by periodically reviewing trigger rules, a thorough analysis of performance logs, and maintenance of accurate allergy, problem, and medication lists in EHRs. Additionally, Brodowy et al [] demonstrated a reduction in DA alerts by simply eliminating alerts resulting from inactive ingredients.

The possibility of customizing CDSS to increase alert specificity and alert acceptance has also been reported []. CDSS, where the severity levels for drug or disease interactions can be modified by the physician to exclude alerts at a level considered not relevant, or the use of an on-demand approach that provides decision support only when a physician considers it relevant, could improve alert acceptance []. This may be related to the caregiver status of the person using CDSS. Knight et al [] demonstrated, for example, that nurses are nearly twice as likely to accept an alert compared with a resident (odds ratio [OR] 1.92, 95% CI 1.44-2.57). The usability of the alerts can also be improved by applying human factors design principles [,]. For example, a tabular format for presenting multiple alerts and the grouping of similar information aid in making prescribing decisions []. Designing a workflow with minimum disruptions by only showing critical to high-severity alerts, as suggested by Shah et al [], could also be effective.

Outcomes

In the literature, we found limited results related to the outcomes of CDSS for DA. We did find studies that investigated the number of prescribing errors (PEs) and studies discussing patient outcomes for different types of ADEs, including ADEs originating from DAs.

CPOE systems can help in making fewer PEs, although not all studies quantify this improvement. Benkhaial et al [] did not find a significant difference in the risk of being prescribed a drug potentially inducing an allergy using electronic recording of the allergy via ICD‑10 codes compared with paper records. Oliven et al [] compared the number of PEs between a department using handwritten drug orders with that of a department using CPOE systems and found a reduced number of PEs in the department using CPOE. No significant difference was found between the two departments for DAs. On the contrary, Evans et al [] demonstrated a reduction from 2.46% (28/1136) patients to 0.07% (4/545) patients with adverse events caused by anti-infective agents due to the introduction of a computerized anti-infective management program. Likewise Mahoney et al [] demonstrated a reduction in PE rates related to DAs from 833 in the preimplementation phase to 109 in the postimplementation phase (OR 0.14, 95% CI 0.11-0.17).

When looking at the outcomes for ADEs, Bates et al [] demonstrated a reduction of 55%, from 10.7 events per 1000 patient-days to 4.86 events per 1000 patient-days for nonintercepted serious medication errors, defined as those either resulting in or with the potential to result in ADEs. In a follow-up study [], this rate decreased to 1.1 events per 1000 patient-days after additional refinements of the system. This objective was reached by including a dose selection menu, simple DA and DDI checking, and the requirement that clinicians indicate the route and frequency of drug administration. Hsieh et al [] found that ADEs resulting from overridden DA alerts do not occur frequently (19/320, 5.9%). In this study, none of the ADEs were considered preventable because the overrides were deemed clinically justifiable. There is limited evidence that systems, mostly electronic systems combining CPOE with CDS, for preventing represcription after the occurrence of an ADE (including DAs) are effective [].

The implementation of CDSS can also influence economic outcomes, eg, by decreasing costs related to medication errors [,]. However, information on cost-effectiveness, specifically of CDS for DAs, was not found.


Discussion

Principal Findings

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first systematic review focusing on CDSS in the field of DA. We included 69 articles in our review. The main findings are the problem of incomplete and inaccurate recording of patients’ DA information, the absence of an appropriate standard terminology that guides the rule bases within a CDSS, problems with rule bases, and the low specificity of DA alerts resulting in alert fatigue.

The first key finding was the incomplete or inaccurate documenting of patients’ DA information in medical records. Accurate and comprehensive recording of DA information in EHRs is essential for the proper functioning of CDSS for DA screening. A recurrent problem described in the literature is the absence of documented information on patients’ allergies, which can be interpreted in two ways: (1) the patient has no known allergies or (2) the patient has an allergy to a certain substance that has not yet been documented in the patient record []. Therefore, the absence of any known DA should also be documented in EHR. Besides underreporting of DAs, outdated or inaccurate DA information in EHRs also poses an important problem.

The second key finding was the absence of a generally accepted standard terminology for the structured documentation of allergy information. The use of Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical, ICD, NDF-RT, RxNorm, and SNOMED CT was described in the literature, but limited information was provided about the exact manner of implementation or integration of these coding systems. An evaluation of terminologies by Goss et al [] showed that currently, a combination of RxNorm and SNOMED CT satisfies most criteria for encoding allergies. The use of free text for documenting DA information in EHRs should be discouraged because of the difficulties for CDS. The use of a standard terminology is required for coded exchange of DA information between institutions on a national and international level and for creating exchangeable decision rules based on standard terminologies. Governments have an important role in providing standardized terminologies in the official national languages. Policies and regulations may be required to support the effective use of coding standards in clinical practice.

The third key finding was that all reported CDSS for DA screening were knowledge-based systems requiring timely review of the rule bases to keep CDSS up to date. Ideally, end users and program developers should work together to regularly review the alerts logs and decision rules to reduce the risk of alert fatigue []. This is a continuous process and not a “one and done” step. Both in-house curated knowledge bases and vendor-based rule bases were reported in the literature, and both have their advantages and disadvantages. In an in-house curated knowledge base, flexibility is guaranteed, leading to potentially higher alert specificity, but it requires substantial effort to develop and maintain the rules base. A vendor-based rule base is easily purchased, but it has less flexibility when it comes to changing decision rules. The end user is dependent on the vendor for updates, but the maintenance burden lies with the vendor. A third possibility is the implementation of a hybrid system combining a commercial rule base with internally defined content refinements or decision rules.

The last key finding is the consistently low specificity of DA alerts. This remains an important problem as it causes high override rates, resulting in alert fatigue. Researchers have tried to tackle the problem of alert fatigue by providing on-demand decision support or customizable computer-triggered decision support. Another option is to turn off certain alerts, for example, by looking at the personal preferences of the healthcare provider who can decide to no longer receive a particular type of warning []. It remains difficult to find a good balance between reducing alert overload and keeping patient safety at a high level. A fixed rule base may therefore not always be appropriate; rather, an adaptive CDSS supported by a predictive risk model may be more useful []. Taking contextual factors into consideration as part of the CDS rules may help in increasing the specificity of DA alerts and lowering the rate of alert overrides. This strategy has been successfully applied for increasing the specificity of DDI alerts. Duke et al [,] and Cornu et al [] have developed context-aware DDI alerts based on relevant patient-specific information, resulting in improved alert acceptance.

Recommendations for Policy, Practice, and Future Research

Future policies should focus on the implementation of standard terminologies to allow standardized coded exchange of DA information on a national and international level and to create exchangeable decision rules.

Information on the effect of CDSS for DAs on patient outcomes was very limited. Thus, future research should focus on evaluating patient outcomes. Hsieh et al [] demonstrated that after overriding DA alerts, none of the resulting ADEs were preventable. However, in their study, only overridden DA alerts were evaluated. It would be interesting to know the number of ADEs that was effectively prevented by CDSS.

It is assumed that implementing DA checking in a CPOE system also has a beneficial financial impact. We did not find any studies specifically related to the economic outcomes of CDS for DAs, but general conclusions about the economic benefits of implementing CPOE systems for the hospitals were documented. At the start, the implementation of a CPOE system requires a large investment, but soon the costs are outweighed by the benefits and result in savings []. However, the cost-effectiveness of CDSS for DA should be further investigated.

Current systems often warn about all possible cross-reactions, although the substance-specific risk should be estimated and the severity of the alert may change as a function of the possibility of cross-reaction (eg, likely, possible, or unlikely). Future research should explore strategies for optimizing cross-reactivity rules and enhancing alert specificity.

Study Limitations

This study has several limitations. First, because of the heterogeneity across the study objectives, study designs, study populations, and reported results, a meta-analysis could not be performed. Second, different study designs require a different methodological framework for assessing bias. The heterogeneity in quantitative and qualitative study designs, reviews, and reports did not allow for a comprehensive and consistent evaluation of bias. This may limit the generalization of the results, but it allowed us to take a broader view of all relevant research in the field of CDS for DAs. Third, we excluded non-English papers, which may constitute selection bias. Additionally, 9 papers were added based on expert opinion because they included information relevant to this review. These extra articles were not retrieved with the query because they included keywords other than those included in the search query. Adjusting the query was not feasible because the keywords were often too general (eg, medication safety), which would result in a high number of irrelevant articles. Finally, publication bias cannot be excluded. We observed a high number of studies published in the US setting, which may lower the international relevance of the results. However, we believe that the findings of our review are relevant in an international context.

Conclusions

This review shows that CPOE systems with CDS for DA screening are perceived as useful in clinical practice. Nevertheless, there are some important problems associated with their use. First, it is not yet clear how and where to document DA information in patients’ EHRs. Second, there is a lack of proper coding terminology for documenting allergies. A major problem with current systems is that alerts are not specific enough, resulting in high override rates and consecutive alert fatigue. Future research should focus on strategies to improve alert specificity and evaluating patient and economic outcomes.

Acknowledgments

LL, SVL, and PC participated in the design of the study. LL and SVL conducted the search. LL, SVL, and PC were responsible for critical evaluation of the search results. LL, SVL, and PC drafted the manuscript. MN, SS, AGD, and PC provided expert opinion on the topic. All authors critically evaluated the article and gave their final approval before submission.

Conflicts of Interest

None declared.


Multimedia Appendix 2

Table with author names, year of publication, study design, aim of the study, and key findings of articles included in the review.

PDF File (Adobe PDF File), 334KB





Abbreviations

ADE: adverse drug event
ADR: adverse drug reaction
CDS: clinical decision support
CDSS: clinical decision support system(s)
CINAHL: Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature
CPOE: Computerized Physician Order Entry
DA: drug allergy
DDI: drug-drug interaction
EHR: electronic health record
ICD: International Classification of Diseases
NDF-RT: National Drug File-Reference Terminology
NLP: natural language processing
PE: prescribing error
OR: odds ratio
PRISMA: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses
SNOMED CT: Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine, Clinical Terms
UNII: unique ingredient identifier


Edited by G Eysenbach; submitted 15.06.17; peer-reviewed by H Seidling, R Robinson; comments to author 09.09.17; revised version received 25.05.18; accepted 21.06.18; published 07.09.18

Copyright

©Laura Légat, Sven Van Laere, Marc Nyssen, Stephane Steurbaut, Alain G Dupont, Pieter Cornu. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 07.09.2018.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.


Why is it important to ask a patient about allergies?

Reported medication allergies often result in patients receiving alternative therapies that are often less effective, more toxic, and costlier than an otherwise preferred regimen.

Why is it important to check allergies in nursing?

To understand and recognise the main types of allergic reaction. To support early recognition and treatment of symptoms of drug allergy to improve patient outcomes. To ensure adverse drug reactions are reported appropriately. To support appropriate drug delivery, including prescribing, administering and monitoring.

What are the important things to note about a medication allergy?

Most drug allergies cause minor skin rashes and hives. These symptoms may occur right away or hours after receiving the drug. Serum sickness is a delayed type of reaction that occurs a week or more after you are exposed to a medicine or vaccine. Drug allergies can also be associated with low blood counts.

What further questions would you ask the patient about drug allergies?

Questions to ask about drug allergy.
Can you tell me more about drug allergy?.
How do I know whether my symptoms were caused by side effects or an allergic reaction?.
Should I stop taking the drug that has caused my reaction?.
Can I take the same drug again if it caused an allergic reaction?.