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Fatal adverse drug reactions in children: A descriptive study in the World Health Organization pharmacovigilance database, 2010-2019.

AIMS: Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) represent a significant public health burden. There are few data on fatal ADRs in children. This population is particularly at risk due to metabolic and physiological immaturity, frequent off-label drug use and limited paediatric clinical pharmacology studies. The study investigated the main characteristics of drug-related deaths registered in World Health Organization pharmacovigilance database, during the past decade.

METHODS: Fatal outcomes registered between 2010 and 2019 in children (<18 y) and reported by physicians were investigated. Age, sex and suspected drugs were described and disproportionality analyses investigated differences according to sex, age and continents with calculation of reporting odds ratio and its 95% confidence interval.

RESULTS: Among the 1 198 560 reports registered in children, 1585 (0.13%) were fatal. They occurred mainly in boys, aged 28 days-23 months. Reports mostly came from the Americas and Europe and involved, besides anti-infectious drugs (mainly vaccines), central nervous system (vigabatrin, paracetamol, methylphenidate…) and antineoplastic/immunomodulating (mainly thalidomide) and cardiovascular (mainly bosentan) drugs without major differences between boys and girls. Large differences were found according to continents and age. The risk of reporting was higher in boys, in children aged <23 months, in the Americas and Africa.

CONCLUSION: Fatal ADRs represented a small part (around 1/1000) of total registered ADRs, occurred more frequently in boys and during the first 2 years of life. Beside anti-infectious drugs (vaccines), neuropsychiatric drugs were the most frequently involved, with large differences according to continents and classes of age.

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