Development and evaluation of an assessment of the age-appropriateness/inappropriateness of formulations used in children

Int J Clin Pharm. 2022 Dec;44(6):1394-1405. doi: 10.1007/s11096-022-01478-5. Epub 2022 Oct 8.

Abstract

Background: Medicines designed for adults may be inappropriate for use in children in terms of strength, dosage form and/or excipient content. There is currently no standardised method of assessing the age-appropriateness of a medicine for paediatric use.

Aim: To develop and test a tool to assess whether a dosage form (formulation) is appropriate for children and estimate the proportion of formulations considered 'inappropriate' in a cohort of hospitalised paediatric patients with a chronic illness.

Method: A multi-phase study: patient data collection, tool development, case assessments and tool validation. Inpatients aged 0-17 years at two UK paediatric/neonatal hospitals during data collection periods between January 2015 and March 2016. Written informed consent/assent was obtained. Medicines assessed were new or regularly prescribed to inpatients as part of their routine clinical care. All medicine administration episodes recorded were assessed using the Age-appropriate Formulation tool. The tool was developed by a consensus approach, as a one-page flowchart. Independent case assessments were evaluated in 2019.

Results: In 427 eligible children; 2,199 medicine administration episodes were recorded. Two assessors reviewed 220 episodes in parallel: percentage exact agreement was found to be 91.7% (99/108) and 93.1% (95/102). In total, 259/2,199 (11.8%) medicine administration episodes involved a dosage form categorised as 'age-inappropriate'.

Conclusion: A novel tool has been developed and internally validated. The tool can identify which medicines would benefit from development of an improved paediatric formulation. It has shown high inter-rater reliability between users. External validation is needed to further assess the tool's utility in different settings.

Keywords: Age-appropriate formulations; Children; Off-label prescribing; Unlicensed medicines.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Child
  • Consensus
  • Data Collection
  • Excipients*
  • Hospitals, Pediatric*
  • Humans
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Reproducibility of Results

Substances

  • Excipients