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Drug Information Resources Review
Jennifer L. Rodis, PharmD, BCPS The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy October 25, 2011
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Objectives Review the differences between primary, secondary, and tertiary resources Discuss the value of each resources type Provide a refresher on searching Pubmed
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Types of Literature
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Types of literature 3 main types of drug information literature
Tertiary Interpretation of primary data Secondary No interpretation, just helps you find sources Primary Original research & analysis
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Real-life Research
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Tertiary Literature Summarizes and interprets the primary literature
Information generally well accepted Place to start for basic information and guidance Can inform your subsequent research
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Tertiary Literature Advantages Disadvantages Convenient, accessible
Often available online Review process of information is already done Disadvantages Lag time Not as complete Author’s interpretation
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Tertiary Literature Textbooks Compendia
Electronic also Compendia Full-text computer databases (Internet) Review articles
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Tertiary Resources – Drug Databases
Online Lexi Comp CRL MICROMEDEX Drug Facts and Comparisons MD Consult AHFS Drug Information Epocrates Print PDR (Physician’s Desk Reference)
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Tertiary Resources - Books
Print Books Remington’s Trissel’s (2 titles) Handbook of Nonprescription Drugs Redbook Drugs in Pregnancy & Lactation (aka: Brigg’s) Martindale: The Complete Drug Reference
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Tertiary Resources - Other
UpToDate Pharmacist’s Letter Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database Ohio Administrative Code (pharmacy.ohio.gov) FDA.gov (Orange Book, CDC.gov Professional Organizations APhA’s MTM Central Package Insert Manufacturer web sites Orange book: approved drugs, patent expiration, and therapeutic equivalents / package inserts, Dear Doctor letters, review info, therapeutic equvalents CDC.gov: vaccines, international travel prophylaxis, infections/bioterrorism
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Using Tertiary Literature
Does author have expertise? Is the information current? Is the information supported with citations? Does the resource contain relevant information? Is the resource free of bias or errors? Is it clear/concise/easy-to-use?
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Secondary Literature Guides you to the primary and tertiary literature
Indexing Bibliographic info only Abstracting Bibliographic citation plus brief summary of article or resource Almost all are electronic format
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Secondary Literature Advantages Disadvantages Simple search strategies
Very current citation information Access point for tremendous amount of primary sources Disadvantages Understanding coverage of the database Tweaking search strategies unique to each database
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Secondary Resources ClinAlert EMBASE (Elsevier)
International Pharmaceutical Abstracts (IPA) Iowa Drug Information System (IDIS) Journal Watch Lexis-Nexis MEDLINE / PubMed Shouldn’t cite a secondary resource
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Primary Literature Primary research Journal articles that are:
Case reports Drug studies Original reports of data Meta-analysis? Unpublished studies
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Primary Literature Considerations
Evaluating the basics Peer-reviewed Journal reputation Source of funding Digging deeper Study methodology Clinical relevance Patient populations
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Primary Literature Advantages Disadvantages
Most current published source Tremendous range of information Personally assess utility/validity Disadvantages Overwhelming volume Interpretation of results Not yet vetted by experts
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Primary Literature Peer-reviewed journals Non-peer reviewed journals
JAMA New England Journal of Medicine American Journal of Health-system Pharmacy Annals of Internal Medicine Non-peer reviewed journals Supplements Pharmacy Today
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What’s the difference? Ease of Use Tertiary Secondary Primary
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What’s the difference? Most Current Primary Secondary Tertiary
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Alternate Sources of DI
Internet, Listservs, and medical news briefs Local and national professional organizations and meetings Pharmaceutical manufacturers Drug information and poison control centers
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Searching Strategies Begin broad, then narrow your search
Start with tertiary sources Use “related articles” Bibliographies Secondary resource guides Always be sure to assess most up to date information available Primary sources
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Searching Pubmed
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Searching Strategies Develop focused question and break into parts
What is the question asking? “Is peptic ulcer prevention with proton pump inhibitors and NSAIDs dose-related?” proton pump inhibitors, dose, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents, prevention of peptic ulcer disease Other forms of the above words and phrases
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Searching Strategies Putting together an answerable question is key to successful evidence-based medicine practice Use PICO method Patient or problem Intervention Comparative intervention Outcome Be Specific!
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Example: PICO What is the minimum or maximum dose of NSAIDs at which
proton-pump inhibitors are effective for peptic ulcer disease prophylaxis? Patient or problem Intervention Comparison Outcome
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Searching Strategies Read up on the basics of the question
Start with tertiary resources for foundation Build on information gathered from texts, review articles, and drug databases with a primary literature search
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Searching Strategies Gather as many articles as possible for all of the parts of the search Use MeSH headings to help narrow or broaden your search MeSH = Medical Subject Headings Official indexing terms for MEDLINE
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Searching Databases: Basic Boolean
“AND” Combines 2 terms (shrinks search) “OR” Gives database more choices (broadens search) “NOT” Limits search (removes undesired terms)
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Basic Boolean Both words must be present in results
paroxetine AND suicide
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Basic Boolean Either word can be present in results
paroxetine OR suicide
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Basic Boolean The first but not the second term will be present in the results paroxetine NOT suicide
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effective for peptic ulcer disease prophylaxis?
Pubmed Search Example What is the minimum or maximum dose of NSAIDs at which proton-pump inhibitors are effective for peptic ulcer disease prophylaxis?
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Search keywords Proton pump inhibitors and dose and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents proton pump inhibitors and dose and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents and prevention of peptic ulcer disease MeSH term search: PPIs, NSAIDs, PUD 1=226 2=96 3=45
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Resources Adapted from lectures by Bridget Protus, PharmD, CGP, MLS delivered 1/2010. Thrower MR. Literature retrieval and Finding Resources Electronically. In: Felkey BG, Fox BI, Thrower MR. Health care informatics: a skills-based resource. Washington DC: American Pharmacists Association; p West, PM. Literature evaluation. In: Pharmacotherapy self-assessment program: science and practice of pharmacotherapy, 5th ed. (PSAP V). Kansas City: American College of Clinical Pharmacy; p Shields, KM. Drug information resources. In: Malone PM, Kier KL, Stanovich JE. Drug information: a guide for pharmacists, 3rd ed. New York: McGraw Hill; p
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Resources Thrower MR. Literature retrieval and Finding Resources Electronically. In: Felkey BG, Fox BI, Thrower MR. Health care informatics: a skills-based resource. Washington DC: American Pharmacists Association; p West, PM. Literature evaluation. In: Pharmacotherapy self-assessment program: science and practice of pharmacotherapy I, II, III. Kansas City: American College of Clinical Pharmacy; p
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