Jul 17 2012
A new tool to guide decisions about safe and effective medication use has been developed at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy.
Drug formularies are used by hospitals, health systems and private and government insurance plans to specify which medicines are approved or preferred for use within that system. Formularies are compiled based on the efficacy, safety and cost-effectiveness of drugs.
Bruce Lambert, director of UIC's Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics, headed a team that devised a checklist of six overarching questions that provides a framework for formulary decision-making.
The new tool, tested at two teaching hospitals -- the University of Illinois Hospital and the John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County -- is designed to assist formulary committees in evaluating drugs being considered for inclusion. If the drug is to be added to the formulary, the tool helps determine what restrictions, if any, should be placed on the drug.
The tool poses 48 questions, grouped into six themes, related to the decision-making process and evidence of need, efficacy, safety, potential for misuse and cost.
"The questions are framed in such a way as to look for evidence of benefit and safety before placing the drugs on the formulary," Lambert said. "This shifts the burden of proof onto those who would advocate placing a drug on the formulary, rather than the assumption all drugs should be included."
Before allowing a new drug on the formulary, the new tool will encourage the formulary committee to seek out and evaluate "a great deal" of evidence, Lambert said, "because we shouldn't be exposing patients to needless risks or promoting or paying for expensive new drugs that are poorly understood."