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L773:0002 8703 OR L773:1097 6744
 

Sökning: L773:0002 8703 OR L773:1097 6744 > Documentation of st...

Documentation of study medication dispensing in a prospective large randomized clinical trial : Experiences from the ARISTOTLE Trial

Alexander, John H. (författare)
Levy, Elliott (författare)
Lawrence, Jack (författare)
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Hanna, Michael (författare)
Waclawski, Anthony P. (författare)
Wang, Junyuan (författare)
Califf, Robert M. (författare)
Wallentin, Lars (författare)
Uppsala universitet,Uppsala kliniska forskningscentrum (UCR)
Granger, Christopher B. (författare)
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 (creator_code:org_t)
Elsevier BV, 2013
2013
Engelska.
Ingår i: American Heart Journal. - : Elsevier BV. - 0002-8703 .- 1097-6744. ; 166:3, s. 559-
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)
Abstract Ämnesord
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  • Background In ARISTOTLE, apixaban resulted in a 21% reduction in stroke, a 31% reduction in major bleeding, and an 11% reduction in death. However, approval of apixaban was delayed to investigate a statement in the clinical study report that "7.3% of subjects in the apixaban group and 1.2% of subjects in the warfarin group received, at some point during the study, a container of the wrong type." Methods Rates of study medication dispensing error were characterized through reviews of study medication container tear-off labels in 6,520 participants from randomly selected study sites. The potential effect of dispensing errors on study outcomes was statistically simulated in sensitivity analyses in the overall population. Results The rate of medication dispensing error resulting in treatment error was 0.04%. Rates of participants receiving at least 1 incorrect container were 1.04% (34/3,273) in the apixaban group and 0.77% (25/3,247) in the warfarin group. Most of the originally reported errors were data entry errors in which the correct medication container was dispensed but the wrong container number was entered into the case report form. Sensitivity simulations in the overall trial population showed no meaningful effect of medication dispensing error on the main efficacy and safety outcomes. Conclusions Rates of medication dispensing error were low and balanced between treatment groups. The initially reported dispensing error rate was the result of data recording and data management errors and not true medication dispensing errors. These analyses confirm the previously reported results of ARISTOTLE.

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