A randomized simulation trial evaluating ABiMed, a clinical decision support system for medication reviews and polypharmacy management

September 03, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Abdelmalek Mouazer, Sophie Dubois, Romain LΓ©guillon, Nada Boudegzdame, Thibaud Levrard, Yoann Le Bars, Christian Simon, Brigitte SΓ©roussi, Julien Grosjean, Romain Lelong, Catherine Letord, StΓ©fan Darmoni, Karima Sedki, Pierre Meneton, Rosy Tsopra, Hector Falcoff, Jean-Baptiste Lamy arXiv ID 2409.01903 Category cs.AI: Artificial Intelligence Cross-listed cs.HC Citations 0 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Background: Medication review is a structured interview of the patient, performed by the pharmacist and aimed at optimizing drug treatments. In practice, medication review is a long and cognitively-demanding task that requires specific knowledge. Clinical practice guidelines have been proposed, but their application is tedious. Methods: We designed ABiMed, a clinical decision support system for medication reviews, based on the implementation of the STOPP/START v2 guidelines and on the visual presentation of aggregated drug knowledge using tables, graphs and flower glyphs. We evaluated ABiMed with 39 community pharmacists during a randomized simulation trial, each pharmacist performing a medication review for two fictitious patients without ABiMed, and two others with ABiMed. We recorded the problems identified by the pharmacists, the interventions proposed, the response time, the perceived usability and the comments. Pharmacists' medication reviews were compared to an expert-designed gold standard. Results: With ABiMed, pharmacists found 1.6 times more relevant drug-related problems during the medication review (p=1.1e-12) and proposed better interventions (p=9.8e-9), without needing more time (p=0.56). The System Usability Scale score is 82.7, which is ranked "excellent". In their comments, pharmacists appreciated the visual aspect of ABiMed and its ability to compare the current treatment with the proposed one. A multifactor analysis showed no difference in the support offered by ABiMed according to the pharmacist's age or sex, in terms of percentage of problems identified or quality of the proposed interventions. Conclusions: The use of an intelligent and visual clinical decision support system can help pharmacists when they perform medication reviews. Our main perspective is the validation of the system in clinical conditions.
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