Litcius/Paper detail

Clinical validation of clinical decision support systems for medication review: A scoping review

Birgit A. Damoiseaux‐Volman, Stephanie Medlock, D. van der Meulen, Jesse de Boer, Johannes A. Romijn, Nathalie van der Velde, Ameen Abu–Hanna

2021British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The aim of this scoping review is to summarize approaches and outcomes of clinical validation studies of clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) to support (part of) a medication review. A literature search was conducted in Embase and Medline. In total, 30 articles validating a CDSS were ultimately included. Most of the studies focused on detection of adverse drug events, potentially inappropriate medications and drug-related problems. We categorized the included articles in three groups: studies subjectively reviewing the clinical relevance of CDSS's output (21/30 studies) resulting in a positive predictive value (PPV) for clinical relevance of 4-80%; studies determining the relationship between alerts and actual events (10/30 studies) resulting in a PPV for actual events of 5-80%; and studies comparing output of CDSSs to chart/medication reviews in the whole study population (10/30 studies) resulting in a sensitivity of 28-85% and specificity of 42-75%. We found heterogeneity in the methods used and in the outcome measures. The validation studies did not report the use of a published CDSS validation strategy. To improve the effectiveness and uptake of CDSSs supporting a medication review, future research would benefit from a more systematic and comprehensive validation strategy.

Topics & Concepts

Clinical decision support systemMedicineMEDLINEClinical significancePopulationAdverse effectPredictive valueRelevance (law)Decision support systemMedical physicsIntensive care medicineComputer sciencePharmacologyData miningInternal medicinePolitical scienceLawEnvironmental healthPharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesPharmacovigilance and Adverse Drug ReactionsPatient Safety and Medication Errors