Background: Drug utilization studies are essential to facilitate rational drug use in the society.
Aim: In this review, we provide an overview of drug utilization measures that can be used with individual-level drug dispensing data, referencing additional reading on the individual analysis. This is intended to serve as a primer for those new to drug utilization research and a shortlist from which researchers can identify useful analytical approaches when designing their drug utilization study.
Results and discussion: We provide an overview of: (1) basic measures of drug utilization which are used to describe changes in drug use over time or compare drug use in different populations; (2) treatment adherence measures with specific focus on persistence and implementation; (3) how to measure drug combinations which is useful when assessing drug-drug interactions, concomitant treatment, and polypharmacy; (4) prescribing quality indicators and measures to assess variations in drug use which are useful tools to assess appropriate use of drugs; (5) proxies of prescription drug misuse and skewness in drug use; and (6) considerations when describing the characteristics of drug users or prescribers.
Keywords: databases; drug utilization; incidence; medication adherence; pharmacoepidemiology; prescribing patterns; prevalence.
© 2022 The Authors. Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.