Pharmacoeconomics and Safe Medication Use
Answer: B
The cost of a medication would be considered a variable
medical cost (Answer B is correct). The cost of the lights
in the clean room would be considered a fixed medical
cost (Answer A is incorrect). The time resulting in loss
of work for a patient requiring this medication would
be considered an indirect cost (Answer C is incorrect).
Additional use of blood products after administration of
this medication would be considered an incremental cost
(Answer D is incorrect).
Given the need to consider efficacy and cost, a cost-
effectiveness analysis would be the best type of analysis
(Answer B is correct). A cost-benefit analysis would
be used if your institution were purely interested in a
monetary outcome (Answer A is incorrect). A cost-min-
imization analysis would only evaluate the difference in
costs between these medications (Answer C is incorrect).
A cost-utility analysis includes the patient perspective,
which was not a focus of this evaluation (Answer D is
incorrect).
Answer: D
A preventable ADE, by definition, is a medication
error that occurs and reaches the patient to cause harm
because of a breach of standard professional behavior
or practice. The patient had a documented history of
cefuroxime allergy with shortness of breath but still
received ceftriaxone and developed another life-threat-
ening anaphylactic reaction; this is a medication error,
and the anaphylactic reaction is the harm. Allergy cross-
reactivity between cefuroxime and ceftriaxone is well
documented for patients with a history of shortness of
breath because of similarity in side chains; therefore, this
is a preventable ADE (Answer D is correct). Although
this case of ceftriaxone-induced life-threatening ana-
phylaxis is an ADE, a preventable ADE best describes
this case (Answer C is incorrect). In general, ADRs and
side effects are synonymous terms, and a ceftriaxone-
induced allergy is an ADR; however, a preventable ADE
best describes this case (Answers A and B are incorrect).
Answer: D
Prothrombin complex concentrate would be the best
tracer for an ADE associated with apixaban (Answer D is
correct). Coagulation factor VIIa would not be effective
for this indication (Answer A is incorrect). Phytonadione
would be an appropriate tracer for a warfarin-induced
bleeding event (Answer B is incorrect). Protamine would
be an appropriate tracer for a heparin- or enoxaparin-
induced bleeding event (Answer C is incorrect).
Answer: C
The guidelines provide several recommendations, with
only one having a strong recommendation, which is
based on the dispensing of medications and streamlin-
ing them as only being from the pharmacy (Answer C
is correct). The other potential answers are potential
opportunities to improve medication safety but are based
on weak recommendations (Answers A, B, and D are
incorrect).
Answer: B
The guidelines suggest (not recommend) that patient/
caregiver-reported outcomes be integrated into routine
patient care (Answer A is incorrect). Data analyses on
the benefit of these interactions are limited to non-ICU
environments, though the theoretical benefits listed in
Answers C and D may be true (Answers C and D are
incorrect; Answer B is correct).
Answer: B
To determine the probability of a drug interaction
between meropenem and valproic acid, the drug inter-
action probability scale should be used (Answer B is
correct). A drug interaction database would provide gen-
eral information and is not a patient-specific evaluation
(Answer A is incorrect). The Naranjo nomogram inves-
tigates the likelihood of an ADE but is not specific to a
drug interaction (Answer C is incorrect). The RUCAM
evaluates the likelihood of drug-induced liver injury
(Answer D is incorrect).
Answer: C
Broad-spectrum antimicrobials should be restricted to
the appropriate clinicians with expertise in this area
(Answer C is correct). Restricting use to intensivists
would not be appropriate because non-ICU patients may
require this agent (Answer A is incorrect). Although
FDA approved only for complicated UTIs, restriction
to pneumonia would not be appropriate (Answer B is
incorrect). Cardiac monitoring is not required for this
medication (Answer D is incorrect).