A systematic review of the use of dosage form manipulation to obtain required doses to inform use of manipulation in paediatric practice

Richey, Roberta H., Hughes, Clare, Craig, Jean V., Shah, Utpal U., Ford, James L., Barker, Catrin E., Peak, Matthew, Nunn, Anthony J. and Turner, Mark A. (2017) A systematic review of the use of dosage form manipulation to obtain required doses to inform use of manipulation in paediatric practice. International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 518 (1-2). 155–166. ISSN 0378-5173

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Abstract

This study sought to determine whether there is an evidence base for drug manipulation to obtain the required dose, a common feature of paediatric clinical practice. A systematic review of the data sources, PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, IPA and the Cochrane database of systematic reviews, was used. Studies that considered the dose accuracy of manipulated medicines of any dosage form, evidence of safety or harm, bioavailability, patient experience, tolerability, contamination and comparison of methods of manipulation were included. Case studies and letters were excluded. Fifty studies were eligible for inclusion, 49 of which involved tablets being cut, split, crushed or dispersed. The remaining one study involved the manipulation of suppositories of one drug. No eligible studies concerning manipulation of oral capsules or liquids, rectal enemas, nebuliser solutions, injections or transdermal patches were identified. Twenty four of the tablet studies considered dose accuracy using weight and/or drug content. In studies that considered weight using adapted pharmacopoeial specifications, the percentage of halved tablets meeting these specifications ranged from 30% to 100%. Eighteen studies investigated bioavailability, pharmacokinetics or clinical outcomes following manipulations which included nine delayed or modified release formulations. In each of these nine studies the entirety of the dosage form was administered. Only one of the 18 studies was identified where drugs were manipulated to obtain a proportion of the dosage form, and that proportion administered. The five studies that considered patient perception found that having to manipulate the tablets did not have a negative impact on adherence. Of the 49 studies only two studies reported investigating children. This review yielded limited evidence to support manipulation of medicines for children. The results cannot be extrapolated between dosage forms, methods of manipulation or between different brands of the same drug.

Item Type: Article
Faculty \ School: Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences > Norwich Medical School
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Depositing User: Pure Connector
Date Deposited: 04 Jan 2017 00:03
Last Modified: 22 Oct 2022 02:03
URI: https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/61903
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2016.12.032

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