2025 Volume 27 Issue 12 Published: 28 December 2025
  

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  • Zheng Zhihua, Wang Yong
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    The stronger the knowledge complementarity between pharmacists and doctors, the more effectively pharmacists can function, particularly in the Surgical Department. There is no unified system for surgical pharmacy services abroad, and it mostly refers to the work of pharmacists in medication- related tasks in the Surgical Department, emphasizing their role in surgical treatment. In recent years, practice standards for surgical pharmacy services and surgical patient care quality control measures involving clinical pharmacist practice have advanced in several developed countries, among which the United States and Australia have established specific standards for pharmacy services in surgery. The pharmacist is an indispensable member of the surgical treatment team. Guangdong Pharmaceutical Association advocates for a new surgical treatment model of “surgeons are responsible for surgery, anesthetists for anesthesia, and pharmacists for medication therapy”, and propose the construction of a special knowledge system “surgical pharmacy” for surgical pharmacists. Surgical pharmacy care is critical measures to ensure safe and rational drug use in surgery, aiming to maximize treatment benefits while reduce risks, which is also the real needs of modern surgical practices like microtraumatic operation and enhanced recovery after surgery.
  • Wu Huiyi, Zheng Ping, Xu Yaowen, Zhao Yinping, Li Yilei
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    Objective  To analyze the efficacy and safety of tranexamic acid normatively used in total hip arthroplasty under the intervention of clinical pharmacists, and to reflect the role of clinical pharmacists in guiding the rational use of hemostatic drugs during the perioperative period. Methods A retrospective study was conducted to collect the clinical data of patients who underwent unilateral total hip arthroplasty (THA) in Department of Orthopedics, Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University from January 2023 to December 2024. The data included patient′s basic information, surgical details, relevant laboratory tests, and the administration protocol of tranexamic acid. According to whether the pharmacist′s advice was followed and the guidelines and consensus-recommended medication regimen of tranexamic acid (1 g intravenous infusion of 10 minutes before skin incision, and 1 g local injection into the joint cavity before closing the incision) was used, the patients were divided into the accepting pharmacists′ guidance group and the control group. The differences in postoperative changes in hemoglobin and hematocrit, total blood loss, transfusion rate, length of hospital stay, and incidence of perioperative complications between the 2 groups were compared. Results A total of 101 patients were included, with 50 males and 51 females, aged 56.1±13.3 years. Forty-nine patients were included in the accepting pharmacists′ guidance group, and 52 were in the control group, 31 of which received tranexamic acid through a single intravenous infusion before the operation, and 21 through intravenous infusion combined with local administration during the operation. There were no statistically significant differences between the 2 groups in terms of gender, age, preoperative hemoglobin and hematocrit, or surgical situation (P>0.05). After the operation, the hemoglobin and hematocrit levels of both groups decreased, which were higher in patients of the accepting pharmacists′ guidance group than those of the control group, showing statistically significant differences on the third day after surgery [hemoglobin: (98.33±13.27)g/L vs. (93.33±9.11)g/L, P=0.029; hematocrit: (0.301±0.040)L/L vs. (0.285±0.030)L/L, P=0.030]. The maximum decrease percentages in hemoglobin and hematocrit levels of the accep- ting pharmacists′ guidance group were lower than those of the control group [hemoglobin: 27.6%(20.6%, 32.5%) vs. 29.1% (25.0%, 33.4%), P=0.029; hematocrit: (25.90±8.10)% vs. (29.63±7.02)%, P=0.015]. Compared with the control group, the estimated total blood loss and blood transfusion rate in the accepting pharmacists′ guidance group were lower (P>0.05), and the length of postoperative hospital stay was shorter [4(4, 6) days vs. 6(4, 8) days, P=0.004]. Patients in neither of the 2 groups experienced surgical site infection after the operation. The incidence of venous thrombosis in the accepting pharmacists′ guidance group was 10.2% (5/49, all intermuscular venous thrombosis), while that in the control group was 7.7% (4/52, 3 cases of intermuscular venous thrombosis and 1 case of lower extremity venous thrombosis), with no statistically significant difference (P>0.05). Conclusions Under the guidance of clinical pharmacists, giving tranexamic acid intravenous infusion before operation combined with local injection during the operation can reduce the decline in hemoglobin and hematocrit levels after THA and shorten the postoperative hospital stay, without risk increase of postoperative venous thrombosis in patients. The pharmaceutical services provided by clinical pharmacists can improve the clinical compliance with guidelines and consensus, and ensure rational drug use during the perioperative period.
  • Wei Xue, Pan Ying, Li Xiaoyan, Liu Tao
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( ) Supplementary files
    Objective To explore the methods and effects of management to allergy risk assessment and de-labeling for patients with β-lactam (BL) allergy labels during the perioperative period led by clinical pharmacists. Methods Perioperative patients with a history of BL allergy recorded in their medical records and hospitalized at Department of Colorectal Surgery in Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center from January 2020 to February 2025 were included in the study. Patients who gave informed consent underwent bedside consultations by clinical pharmacists and the relevant allergy history was collected. The Penicillin Allergy Risk Tool (PEN-FAST) and Antibiotics Allergy Assessment Tool (AAAT) were used to stratify the risk of allergic reactions in patients. Pharmacists provided personalized de-labeling or medication recommendations based on the patient′s allergy risk (extremely low, low, and moderate/high) and the characteristics of allergic reactions. The physician′s adoption of pharmacist advices and the safety of medication in de-labeling patients were followed up. Results A total of 93 patients with a history of BL allergy in the medical records were collected, of which 66 (70.97%) received pharmacists′ evaluation and were included in the analysis. Risk assessment results showed that 25 patients (37.88%) were stratified as having extremely low risk (PEN-FAST evaluation score 0), 8 patients (12.12%) as having low risk, and 33 patients (50.00%) as having medium/high risk (AAAT evaluation). Based on these results, pharmacists suggested that 28 patients (42.42%) could be directly de-labeled, 5 (7.58%) could be treated with BL antibiotics under informed consent and close monitoring, and 33 (50.00%) could be treated with BL antibiotics under close monitoring after negative skin test. After that, 80.30% (53/66) of the pharmacists′ suggestions were adopted by doctors, and BL treatments were given during the perioperative period. Neither allergic reactions nor other adverse reactions related to the use of BL antibiotics occurred. Conclusions For patients with BL allergy labels, the de-labeling method based on allergy risk stratification led by clinical pharmacists is feasible and safe for patients. Most recommendations could be adopted by clinical physicians.
  • Liu Jing, Yang Dan, Xu Jianwen, Zhou Shuifang, Zhang Desheng, Zhang Shoutian, Guo Guimu
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    Objective To develop a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model for tacrolimus in patients with liver cirrhosis to predict the exposure of tacrolimus in cirrhotic patients with different genotypes of cytochrome P450(CYP) 3A, so as to provide the basis for optimizing the dosing regimen after organ transplantation in patients with liver cirrhosis. Methods The physicochemical properties, biopharmaceutical parameters and clinically measured pharmacokinetic (PK) data of tacrolimus were obtained from domestic and foreign literature and the DrugBank database. The plasma concentration-time curve data was obtained using the GetData software. A PBPK model for healthy adults was established and the concentration-time curve was simulated using PK-Sim  software. The physiological parameters of healthy people in the model were replaced by those of patients with liver cirrhosis, and the PBPK model for patients with liver cirrhosis was constructed. The reliability of the PBPK model was evaluated by the fitting situation between simulated concentration-time curve and the observed data in the literature, as well as the fold error (FE) between the predicted and observed PK parameter values. The model was considered to have good predictive performance if observed values in the literature were within the 95% confidence interval (CI) of the values predicted by the model, and the FE between the predicted and the observed PK parameter values was<2.0. The exposure level and plasma trough concentration of tacrolimus in cirrhotic patients with different CYP3A genotypes and Child-Pugh grades was predicted using the established model, and then the minimum and maximum effective doses of tacrolimus for these patients were calculated. Results The concentration- time curves simulated by the established PBPK model for healthy people and cirrhostic patients had a good fitting situation with the observed data in the literature, and the observed values fell within the 95%CI range of the simulated concentration-time curve; the FE of the predicted and observed PK parameters were all less than 2.0 (0.64-1.40). The predictive results showed that the exposure of tacrolimus in CYP3A5 expressors with Child-Pugh A, B and C was 1.48-, 2.51-, and 3.87-fold of those in healthy CYP3A5 expressors after oral tacrolimus (0.12 mg/kg), and the corresponding data was 1.51-, 2.42-, and 3.55-fold in CYP3A5 non-expressors. Conclusion The established tacrolimus PBPK model for cirrhotic patients is accurate and reliable in predicting the exposure of tacrolimus in cirrhotic patients with different CYP3A genotypes, which helps providing theoretical support for formulating individualized medication regimens in clinical practice.
  • Tian Chunyu, Yang Shaojie, Fu Xian, Zhang Yanhua, Ma Xu, Zhao Bingqing
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    Objective To mine the risk signals of adverse event (AE) related to 2 kinds of antibody- drug conjugates (ADC) targeted to human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), trastuzumab deruxtecan (T-DXd) and trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1), and provide references for clinical safe medication. Methods The adverse event reports from the US Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database from the first quarter of 2014 to the first quarter of 2024 with T-DXd and T-DM1 as the main suspected drugs were collected. The AE reports were standardized using the preferred terms (PT) and system organ class (SOC) in Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities version 26.1. Risk signals were detected using the reporting odds ratio (ROR) method and the proportional reporting ratio (PRR) method. The PT that met the conditions of report number≥3 and the lower limit of the 95% confidence interval of the ROR>1, PRR>2 and χ2≥4 was defined as a risk signal. The AE related to T-DXd and T-DM1 were ranked separately according to the number of reports and the signal intensity. Results A total of 4 526 T-DXd-related AE reports and 2 788 cases of T-DM1-related AEs were collected. There were 120 PTs and 15 SOCs related to T-DXd, and 108 PTs and 18 SOCs related to T-DM1. The top 5 PTs in the ranking of T-DXd-related AE reports number were interstitial lung disease (454 cases), nausea (450 cases), fatigue (313 cases), vomiting (186 cases), and pneumontis (173 cases), of them, fatigue is not recorded in the label; the top 5 PTs in the ranking of T-DM1-related AE reports number were platelet count decreased (137 cases), thrombocytopenia (115 cases), peripheral neuropathy (88 cases), fever (83 cases), and bone marrow depression (81 cases). The top 5 PTs related to T-DXd in signal intensity were ocular hematoma, Krebs von den Lungen-6 (KL-6) increased, radiation necrosis, pulmonary opacity, and interstitial lung disease, of them, the first 4 were not recorded in the label; the top 5 PTs related to T-DM1 in signal intensity were liver-pulmonary syndrome, spider nevus, radiation necrosis, nodular regenerative hyperplasia, and central nervous system necrosis, of them, the first 3 were not recorded in the label. Conclusions Multiple risk signals related to T-DXd and T-DM1 were not recorded in the labels. There are differences in AE risk signals between the 2 drugs, suggesting that clinical medication should be selected reasonably based on the specific conditions of the patients.
  • Jiang Yongxian, Zhao Shan, Li Zhangyue, Li Gen, Qin Bo, Yi Zhanmiao
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    Objective To analyze the current research status and application value of artificial intelligence (AI) technology in adverse drug event prediction. Methods Literature on the application of AI technology in drug adverse event prediction from databases such as PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, China Biomedical Literature Service System, and CNKI was searched. The extracted literature data included the first author, publication year, source country, research type, research field, adverse event type, drugs, modeling algorithm, performance indicators, etc. Evidence levels were assessed using the 2011 edition of the Oxford Center for Evidence-Based Medicine (a total of 5 levels, with level 1 being the highest and level 5 being the lowest). Descriptive statistical analysis was performed using Excel 2021. Results A total of 52 articles were ultimately included, including 10 prospective studies and 42 retrospective studies. The evidence quality assessment of the literature revealed that 10 studies were non-randomized controlled trials or prospective cohort studies (evidence of level 2), 41 were retrospective cohort studies or case-control studies (evidence of level 3), and 1 was a single-center longitudinal cohort study and cross-sectional study (evidence of level 4). Fifty-two articles used a total of 10 AI models, of which 23 articles only used 1 model, and 29 articles used 2 or more models, totaling 111 model applications. The more frequently used models were random forest model, neural network model, logistic regression model, reinforcement model, support vector machine model, Bayesian network model, and long short-term memory (LSTM), accounting for 22.52% (25/111), 18.02% (20/111), 17.12% (19/111), 11.71% (13/111), 10.81% (12/111), 6.31% (7/111), and 5.41% (6/111), respectively. The model with best performance was LSTM, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC-AUC) of 0.85±0.04, accuracy of 0.76±0.08, recall rate of 0.83±0.11, specificity of 0.74±0.05, F1 score of 0.79±0.18, and precision of 0.86±0.11. More articles were related to adverse events related to cardiovascular, digestive, and immune systems, accounting for 17.31% (9/52), 11.54% (6/52), and 9.62% (5/52), respectively. The random forest model showed superior performance in predicting adverse events of immunosuppressants, with an ROC-AUC of 0.82, recall rate of 0.57, and precision of 0.80. The neural network model showed better performance in predicting adverse events of antitumor drugs, with an ROC-AUC of 0.87, recall rate of 0.87, and precision of 0.73. The logistic regression model performed well in predicting adverse events of immunosuppressants, with an ROC-AUC of 0.84, recall rate of 0.57, and precision of 0.81. From the perspective of systems involved in adverse events, the reinforcement model demonstrated the best performance for predicting adverse events in the cardiovascular system (ROC-AUC=0.82, precision=0.62); for the digestive system, the random forest model achieved the highest performance (ROC-AUC=0.80, recall=0.59, precision=0.92); for the immune system, the neural network model performed the best (ROC- AUC: 0.90±0.06, recall: 0.86±0.12, precision: 0.93±0.09). Conclusion The performance of existing AI models in predicting adverse drug events varies, with optimal models differing across systems. Current research primarily focuses on predicting adverse events in the cardiovascular, digestive, and immune systems, but clinical practicality remains insufficient.
  • Jing Shen′ao, Ma Rongrong, Zhang Rui, Liu Fengqin, Zhao Xia, Ma Qingkun, Huang Xin
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    Objective To analyze the current status and existing issues in assessment of the severity of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and explore the feasibility of applying Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 5.0 (CTCAE 5.0) as a grading basis for ADR severity. Methods A single-center retrospective study was conducted in this study. The severity of ADRs submitted by the First Affiliated Hospital of Shandong First Medical University (Shandong Provincial Qianfoshan Hospital) (our hospital) to the National Adverse Drug Reaction Monitoring Center (National Center) from January 1, 2023 to September 30, 2024 was re-evaluated based on CTCAE 5.0 (grades 1-2 were judged as “mild” and grades 3-5 as “severe”). The collection of ADR reports, patients′ basic information, etc. were analyzed descriptively and statistically. The Kappa coefficients among the evaluation results of initial reports, pharmacist review reports, re-evaluation results based on CTCAE 5.0, and the evaluation results of National Center were calculated (Kappa≤0.4 indicating low consistency, >0.4-0.6 moderate consistency, >0.6-0.8 high consistency, and >0.8 excellent consistency). According to clinical outcome of patients, reports were divided into 3 subgroups, namely cured, improved, and not improved groups, and the Kappa coefficients for subgroups were calculated, respectively. Results A total of 1 175 ADR reports were submitted during the study period (invoving 1 175 patients), with 968 reports (82.38%) from clinical physicians, 152 reports (12.94%) from pharmacists, and 55 reports (4.68%) from nurses. Among the 1 175 patients, 675 were female, 499 were male, and one patient was with unknown gender information; their ages were from 1 to 95 years, with a median age of 56 years. The Kappa coefficients in ADR severity classification among the initial reports, pharmacist review reports, CTCAE 5.0 re-evaluation results, and the National Center′s assessments were 0.20 (lower), 0.56 (moderate), and 0.74 (higher), respectively. Subgroup analysis showed the consistency between the initial reports and the National Center′s assessment results was lower (Kappa values were 0.05, 0.23 and 0.43, respectively); there were differences in the consistency between the pharmacist review and the National Center assessment results (Kappa values were 0.39 in the cured group, 0.53 in the improved group, and 0.74 in the not improved group), and the consistency between the CTCAE 5.0 re-evaluation results and the National Center assessment results was higher (Kappa values were 0.74, 0.74 and 0.66, respectively). Conclusions Discrepancies exist in severity assessments of ADRs reported by our hospital between the initial reports, pharmacist review reports, CTCAE 5.0 re-evaluation, and the National Center assessment. Different reporting personnel may have different understandings of the ADR severity assessment standards. It is suggested that CTCAE 5.0 could be used as an auxiliary reference standard for ADR severity grading in order to improve the consistency between the reporter's assessment results and the National Center's assessment results.
  • Li Mingfei, Qu Jinghan, Zhang Bo
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    Approximately 4% to 16% of outpatients and inpatients carry penicillin allergy label(PAL) in their medical records; however, over 90% of these patients are ultimately confirmed to tolerate penicillin. These patients who have inappropriate PAL often cannot use first-line penicillins when infection occurs, and have to use other antibiotics, resulting in decreased effectiveness, increased medical costs, and increased risk of adverse clinical outcomes such as bacterial resistance and Clostridium difficile infection. The implementation of allergy risk-stratification tools in the evaluation combined with systematic allergy testing protocols (e.g., skin testing, oral challenges) enables removal of inappropriate PAL in clinical practice, thereby optimizing antimicrobial utilization and reducing healthcare expenditures. The World Health Organization has recognized penicillin allergy de-labeling as a critical intervention for global antimicrobial stewardship. Removing inappropriate PAL have become a hot topic in international research in recent years, while China′s progress in this field is relatively lagging behind. This article provides a review of the proportion of PAL and the strategy for de-labeling of penicillin allergy, in order to provide reference for promoting relevant clinical practice and research in China.
  • Tian Shengjie, Liu Dingsheng, Yang Yanping
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    A 38-year-old male patient received intensive immunosuppressive therapy of cyclos- porine A (target trough concentration 200 μg/L) for severe aplastic anemia. After 4 months of maintenance treatment, the patient experienced fluctuations in blood pressure and glucose, and abnormal renal function with the highest blood pressure 150/95 mmHg, blood glucose 8-10 mmol/L, serum uric acid 479 μmol/L, serum creatinine 109 μmol/L, and the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) 78.47 ml/(min·1.73 m2), which was considered to be cyclosporine A-related hypertension, diabetes, and chronic kidney disease stage 2 (nephrotoxicity). The patient was administered symptomatic treatments with carvedilol and metformin, and the dose of cyclosporine A was adjusted (target trough concentration of 150 μg/L). Due to the decrease in hemoglobin from 134 g/L to 121 g/L, the dose of cyclosporine A was increased with the target trough concentration of 200 μg/L. After 4 months of treatments, the hemoglobin was 114 g/L, serum creatinine increased to 114 μmol/L, uric acid increased to 593 μmol/L, cystatin C increased to 1.26 mg/L, and eGFR decreased to 66.94 ml/(min·1.73 m2). Metformin was changed to empagliflozin; 2 months later, the patient′s hemoglobin increased to 136 g/L, serum uric acid decreased to 446 μmol/L, serum creatinine increased to 119 μmol/L, and eGFR was not improved. Subsequently, carvedilol was changed to nifedipine controlled- release tablets. After one week of treatments, the serum creatinine decreased to 90 μmol/L and eGFR increased to 94.83 ml/(min·1.73 m2). During the combination therapy, cyclosporine A dosage remained and renal function of the patient was stable with serum creatinine levels around 90 μmol/L and eGFR≥90 ml/(min·1.73 m2).
  • Yang Yuping, Sun Bao, Luo Zhiying, Zhang Bikui, Liu Wenhui
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    A 70-year-old male patient with small cell lung cancer received 2 cycles of che- motherapy(etoposide+carboplatin, 21 days per cycle) and was subsequently treated with pembrolizumab (200 mg by intravenous infusion, once every 3 weeks) combined with intensity-modulated radiation therapy of the lung. Fifteen days after pembrolizumab initiation, the patient developed symptoms including myalgia, diplopia, ptosis, and abnormal liver function. The patient was treated with reduced glutathione and bicyclol for liver protection. Considering the possible relationship between pembrolizumab and the aforementioned symptoms, radiotherapy was discontinued 5 days later, magnesium isoglycyrrhizinate was added for liver protection, and methylprednisolone(40 mg once daily by intravenous infusion and 80 mg once daily after 2 days) was administered. The symptoms were further worsened after 5 days of the above treatments, and the patient experienced myocardial infarction, high-grade atrioventricular block, and respiratory failure. Aspirin, rosuvastatin, perindopril, and isoprenaline were given, and the patient underwent emergency percutaneous coronary intervention and temporary pacemaker implantation. The following day, the patient experienced sudden cardiac arrest, and return of spontaneous circulation was achieved after 3 minutes of resuscitation. After multidisciplinary team consultation, the patient was diagnosed with pembrolizumab-induced immune- related myocarditis complicated by myositis and myasthenia gravis. High-dose methylprednisolone pulse therapy and human immunoglobulin were given. One week later, the patient′s ptosis was significantly improved, myocardial enzymes markedly decreased, and the temporary pacemaker was removed. The glucocorticoids were changed to prednisone tablets orally and the dose was gradually reduced. Concurrently, the patient received symptomatic and supportive treatments of liver protection and acid suppression. After 2 months of treatments, the patient showed bilateral eyelid free movement, he was able to ambulate, and his disease was at stable condition. The patient did not receive pembrolizumab in the subsequent anti-tumor treatment, and etoposide plus carboplatin was continued.
  • Dai Ying, Qiu Shunru, Cheng Xiangcun, Liang Yu, Xu Wen, Wu Zihao, Wang Yichun
    Abstract ( ) PDF ( )
    A 56-year-old male patient with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and mediastinal lymph node metastasis received camrelizumab(200 mg on day 1) combined with chemotherapy (cisplatin 30 mg, on days 1-3; liposomal paclitaxel 210 mg, on day 1), with one course of treatment every 3 weeks. The renal function and electrolytes were normal before treatments. After 3 courses of treatments, camrelizumab was discontinued and the regimen was switched to local radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy (drugs were as before) due to inadequate tumor response. After an additional 3 courses, concurrent chemora- diotherapy was stopped due to fever and cough. Renal function was monitored 8 times during treatment and all results were within normal limits. One month later, the patient developed acute renal insufficiency with electrolyte disturbances, with estimated glomerular filtration rate(eGFR) 32 ml/(min·1.73 m2), serum potassium 1.91 mmol/L, and serum calcium 1.69 mmol/L, which was not improved after 1 week of anti-infective therapy and electrolyte supplementation(potassium and calcium). Immune-related kidney injury was suspected and intravenous injection of methylprednisolone 40 mg once daily was initiated additionally. Renal function was still no marked improvement after 10 days, and the methylprednisolone dose was increased to 200 mg once daily, which was tapered to 120 mg after 3 days and then halved weekly. Seven days later, significant improvement of renal function was observed, and his eGFR increased to 73 ml/(min·1.73 m2). Renal biopsy revealed inflammatory infiltration and severe acute tubular injury, with negative immunofluorescence for complements and immunoglobulins, which consistent with the histopathological features of immune checkpoint inhibitor-associated renal injury. Two days later, methylprednisolone was switched to oral prednisone 40 mg once daily. After 7 days, renal function and electrolytes normalized, with eGFR 80 ml/(min·1.73 m2), potassium 3.57 mmol/L, and calcium 2.33 mmol/L.