# Checklist-Based Identification of Adverse Drug Reactions in Emergency Department Patients

**Authors:** Benjamin J. Hellinger, Thilo Bertsche, Yvonne Remane, André Gries

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicines12040025 · Medicines · 2025-10-17

## TL;DR

A checklist improved the identification of adverse drug reactions in emergency department patients compared to routine care.

## Contribution

A checklist-based method significantly increased the detection of adverse drug reactions in ED patients.

## Key findings

- Checklist identified 6.0% ADRs compared to 2.4% documented in routine care.
- Antithrombotics were the most common drug class causing ADRs.
- Worsened general condition was the most common chief complaint among ADR patients.

## Abstract

Background: Patients presenting at the emergency department (ED) have a wide variety of complaints. In some of those patients a possible reason for their complaints might be an adverse drug reaction (ADR). An appropriate identification of ADR in this setting is required to optimize drug therapy and to prevent serious harm deriving from an overlooked ADR. Methods: This retrospective study assessed medical records of patients for ADR as a reason for the ED presentation in two assessments. In the first assessment, medical records were evaluated for potential ADR leading to ED presentation with a predefined checklist by an examiner not involved in initial patient treatment. In the second assessment the same medical records were assessed for ADR identified by the physician in the initial patient presentation. Discrepancies in identified ADR were compared. For descriptive data analysis and statistical evaluation, the McNemar test was performed. Results: From 35,333 patients admitted to the ED, full data were available from 34,747 patients for evaluation. In those patients, 2071 (6.0%) ADR were identified as being the reason for ED presentation by using the checklist. In 828 (2.4%) patients, emergency department physicians had documented an ADR in the medical records. By using the checklist, ADR identification could be improved significantly as compared to routine care, at 6.0% vs. 2.4%, respectively (p < 0.001). The most common chief complaint in patients with an ADR was worsened general condition. Most common drug class causing ADR were antithrombotics. Conclusions: ADR seem to be overlooked in routine care since a significantly higher number of ADR were found by using a checklist-based method as compared to ADR documented as part of routine examination. Therefore, implementing the checklist in the routine process might improve ADR identification.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ADR (MESH:D064420), drug reaction (MESH:D004342)
- **Chemicals:** antithrombotics (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12551126/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12551126