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Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal |
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Volume 12 Nos 1&2 January - March , 2006 |
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Audit of prescribing practices of topical corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology clinics in north Palestine
W.M. Sweileh1
تدقيق ممارسات وصف الكورتيكوستيرويدات الموضعية في العيادات الخارجية للأمراض الجلدية في شمال فلسطين
وليد محمد صويلح
الخلاصـة: في إطار هذه الدراسة التي استهدفت تحليل أنماط وصف الكورتيكوستيرويدات الموضعية، تم جمع 802 من الوصفات العلاجية في العيادات الخارجية للأمراض الجلدية خلال المدة من حزيران/يونيو 2003 إلى أيلول/سبتمبر 2003، وذلك من جميع العيادات الجلدية الخاصة الاثنتي عشرة الموجودة في شمال فلسطين. وبلغ عدد مرات وصف الكورتيكوستيرويدات الموضعية 616 مرة من جملة الأدوية الموصوفة التي بلغ عددها 2458 دواءً. وبالنسبة لجميع الوصفات، كانت المعلومات المتعلقة بقوة الدواء، ومدة المعالجة، والكمية الموصي باستهلاكها، غير كافية؛ أما المعلومات المتعلقة بتكرار أخذ الدواء، وطريقة أخذه، وموضعه، فكانت كافية. ولوحظ أن الكورتيكوستيرويدات ذات النجاعة العالية وذات النجاعة العُلْيَا، قد تم وصفها لنحو 18% من المرضى؛ في حين تمَّ وصف الكورتيكوستيرويدات المتوسطة النجاعة لنحو 50% من المرضى. وتوصي الدراسة بمواصلة تقديم التثقيف الطبي للممارسين، بُغْيَة تحسين استخدام الكورتيكوستيرويدات الموضعية في علاج الأمراض الجلدية.
ABSTRACT: To analyse the prescribing pattern of topical corticosteroids, 802 outpatient dermatology prescriptions were randomly collected during June 2003–September 2003 from all the 12 nongovernmental dermatological clinics in north Palestine. Of the 2458 medications prescribed, 616 were topical corticosteroids. In most prescriptions, information about strength, duration of treatment and quantity to be used was inadequate, while information regarding frequency, route and area of application was adequate. High efficacy and highest efficacy corticosteroids were prescribed for approximately 18% of patients; intermediate efficacy preparations were prescribed for approximately 50%.
Audit des pratiques de prescription des dermocorticoïdes dans les services de
consultations dermatologiques externes dans le nord de la Palestine
RÉSUMÉ: Pour analyser les modes de prescription des dermocorticoïdes, 802 ordonnances prescrites dans les services de consultations dermatologiques externes ont été collectées entre juin et septembre 2003 dans l’ensemble des 12 services de consultations dermatologiques externes non gouvernementaux situés dans le nord de la Palestine. Sur les 2458 médicaments prescrits, 616 étaient des dermocorticoïdes. Dans la plupart des ordonnances, les informations concernant la concentration, la durée du traitement et la quantité à utiliser étaient inadéquates, tandis que celles concernant la fréquence, le mode et la zone d’application convenaient. Des corticoïdes de niveau d’efficacité élevée et très élevée ont été prescrits pour environ 18 % des patients ; des préparations d’efficacité intermédiaire ont été prescrites pour environ 50 %.
1Department of Clinical Pharmacy, College of Pharmacy, An-Najah National University, Nablus, Palestine (Correspondence to W.M. Sweileh: waleedsweileh@yahoo.com).
Received: 13/04/03; accepted: 12/10/04
.
Introduction
The ultimate goal in dermatological therapy is to use the safest and least
number of drugs in order to obtain the best possible effect in the shortest
period at reasonable cost. One step to achieve this is to monitor, evaluate and
therapeutically analyse the prescribing pattern of dermatological drugs. Such
ana-lysis will not only improve the standards of medical treatment at all levels
in the health system, but will also help in the identification of problems
related to drug use such as polypharmacy, drug–drug interaction and adverse drug
reactions. The ultimate outcome of the dermatological prescription analysis will
be a message to the prescribing physician to achieve rational, cost-effective
medical care.
Among the drugs used in dermatology are vitamins/minerals, antibiotics,
antiseptics, antifungals, antivirals, antihistamines, local anaesthetics,
emollients, keratolytics, antiparasitics and topical corticosteroids. Topical
corticosteroids, which were introduced in the late 1950s, have revolutionized
the practice of dermatology and they still constitute one of the largest groups
of drugs used in this discipline. They are divided into 5 groups according to
their efficacy [1]. As a general rule, physicians should use the weakest
possible corticosteroid that will treat the dermatological condition. Topical
corticosteroids are mainly used for non-infective dermatologic disorders
associated with inflammation such as psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, contact
dermatitis and otitis externa [2–9].
Topical corticosteroids, like many other drugs, have many (sometimes serious)
adverse reactions such as hypersensitivity, percutaneous absorption and
tachyphylaxis [10–19]. The potent anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressant
actions of oral, and sometimes topical, corticosteroids increase susceptibility
to bacterial and fungal infections, and therefore may preclude their use when
infection is the known main cause of the condition [20]. In addition, children
may be more vulnerable than adults to systemic effects of topical
corticosteroids because percutaneous absorption is greater [17].
In order to minimize adverse cutaneous and systemic reactions, especially on
prolonged use, rational use of topical corticosteroid should include the careful
consideration of the patient’s age, total area of application, quantity to be
applied and efficacy of the selected corticosteroid. A study carried out in
Nottingham showed that nearly three quarters of patients with atopic eczema
worried about using topical steroids and almost a quarter were non-compliant
because they were afraid of side effects such as skin thinning and growth
retardation [21]. The authors concluded that health care professionals need to
give patients more information about their topical corticosteroids so that
treatment is not withheld from those who need it.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate and analyse the pattern of prescribing
topical corticosteroids among outpatients attending dermatology clinics in north
Palestine. The significance of such a study stems from the observation that
self-medication and erratic use of drugs in general is noticeable among
Palestinian people, and this can increase the risk of drug-related problems.
Furthermore, the lack of continuing medical education for physicians in
Palestine necessitates medical auditing of prescribing practices.
Methods
The dermatological prescriptions of 802 outpatients attending nongovernmental
dermatological clinics were collected at random from all areas in north
Palestine and analysed. The prescriptions collected during the study included
prescriptions from all 12 nongovernmental dermatological clinics located in
Qalqilia, Tulkaram, Jenin, Nablus and Jenin. The collection was made twice
weekly for 3 months from June 2003 to September 2003. Patients attending
nongovernmental clinics fill their prescriptions at nongovernmental (community
or private) pharmacies and have to pay for their medications. The collection was
made after dispensing the prescription at community pharmacies. We contacted all
152 pharmacies in the area and 43 agreed to participate. The pharmacists were
informed about the project and were willing to facilitate the collection
process. Permission was obtained from the local health authorities to conduct
the project. The community pharmacists were asked to provide all dermatological
prescriptions dispensed on randomly pre-set days (Sundays and Tuesdays) during
the week for the assigned period of the project. For confidentiality purposes,
names of patients were concealed after ensuring that the 802 prescriptions
belonged to 802 different patients.
All the information contained in the 802 prescriptions was entered into SPSS for
Windows, version 10. This included: age, sex, number of drugs, type of topical
corticosteroid, strength/efficacy of the drug, site of application, dose and
frequency of application, duration of therapy, quantity of drug to be dispensed,
the nature of concomitantly prescribed drugs, whether products were locally
produced or imported and the cost of the preparation. The official drug index in
Palestine (Medic) was used to identify the active ingredients of each prescribed
brand name [22]. These topical corticosteroid products were classified into 5
categories according to efficacy: lowest, low, intermediate, high and highest.
Results
The total number of drugs prescribed for the 802 outpatients attending the
dermatology clinics was 2458, i.e. a mean of 3.06 drugs per patient; 2.48 of
these were topical pre-parations, the rest were oral preparations. The
therapeutic classes of the 2458 drugs prescribed, along with their
pharmaceutical dosage forms, are presented in Table 1. Injections were only
rarely prescribed to outpatients attending dermatology clinics. The maximum
number of drugs on a single prescription was 5 and the minimum was 1. For 452
patients (56.4%), ≥ 3 drugs were prescribed on a single prescription.

The majority (56.5%) of the prescriptions for topical corticosteroids were for
males. Most (61.6%) of the patients recei-ving them were males and females under
the age of 18 years (Table 2).

The total number of topical corticosteroid drugs prescribed for the 802 patients
was 616. These were prescribed for 414 patients suggesting that sometimes more
than 1 topical corticosteroid was prescribed on the same prescription for the
same patient (mean 1.48 topical corticosteroids/patient). All topical
corticosteroids were prescribed by brand name. More than 60 different brands
were prescribed, only 4% of them were Palestinian products, the rest were
imported.
The strength of the active constituent was not specified in the majority of the
prescriptions. Frequency of administration, route of administration and area of
application was specified in the majority of prescriptions while quantity and
duration of treatment were not specified for the major-ity of patients (Table
3).

The intermediate efficacy corticosteroid betamethasone 17-valerate 0.1%, alone
or in combination with other agents such as neomycin (0.5% neomycin sulfate),
was the most commonly prescribed topical corticosteroid, followed by the highest
efficacy corticosteroid, clobetasol propionate (Table 4).
Less than one third of the topical corticosteroids were prescribed alone: most
were prescribed as combination products containing antimicrobials or other types
of agents (Table 4).

Discussion
Several studies have addressed the issue of dermatological drug prescribing
patterns. Some of these have indicated inappropriate utilization or
over-utilization of potent, to-pical corticosteroids. In a study conducted in
the United States of America between 1989 and 1991, dermatologists were 3.9
times more likely to prescribe very high potency steroids than were other
physicians, and physicians other than dermatologists were 8.4 times more likely
than dermatologists to prescribe combination agents containing moderate- or
high-potency topical corticosteroids plus an anti-infective agent [23]. Another
American study analysed data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey
for visits to paediatricians from 1990 to 1994 and isolated visits at which a
topical corticosteroid agent or clotrimazole-betamethasone dipropionate was
prescribed. Paediatricians rarely used high-potency topical corticosteroids, but
their use of clotrimazole-betame-thasone dipropionate was mostly for the
youngest children, in whom such corticosteroid use is least appropriate. The
authors concluded that some paediatricians may be unaware that this drug has a
high-potency corticosteroid component [24].
In a study carried out in India, prescri-bing of topical corticosteroids was
studied in 200 patients attending a dermatology outpatient clinic. Potent
topical corticosteroids were commonly used in 86 (43%) patients. The quantity of
topical steroid was mentioned for only 4% of patients, frequency of
administration was specified in 77%, the site of administration in 69% and
duration of treatment in 55% [25]. In another study carried out in Delhi, India,
at a tertiary hospital, the authors found that in the dermatology department,
the mean number of drugs per prescription was 2.6, rate of drug prescribing by
generic name was 6.98%, antibiotics accounted for 46.86% of prescriptions and
injections (mainly antihistamines) 6.76%. They reported that 23% of the total
drugs prescribed were from the Delhi State Essential Drugs Formulary, i.e. they
were generic [26].
The results of this study indicate that topical corticosteroids are commonly
pres-cribed for outpatients attending dermato-logy clinics in north Palestine
(51.6%). The prescription analysis shows that prescribing information was
inadequate in the majority of cases. For example, the quantity of the
corticosteroid to be applied was not mentioned in 87.7% of prescriptions and
duration of use not mentioned in 71.6%. This may result in under-utilization of
the preparation and subsequent sub-therapeutic outcome. There is also the
possibility of over-utilization of the topical corticosteroid by the patient,
with subsequent risk
of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis suppression.
The possibility of inappropriate use of topical corticosteroids is facilitated
by the fact that, although there are few published reports on the practice [27],
it is a common occurrence in Palestine for most drugs to be sold in community
pharmacies without a physician’s order, and prescriptions in ge-neral are
dispensed several times without regard to the number of refills, which in most
cases is not written on the prescription.
In this study, none of the topical corticosteroids were prescribed by their
generic names. Using brand names for prescribing may sometimes create dispensing
errors. Drugs with similar brand names but different ingredients might
mistakenly be switched [28]. Furthermore, in Palestine, there is a wide range in
the cost of various branded products for the same generic drug. This means that
prescribing drugs by their generic names could minimize the cost and thus
increase prescription compliance. Unfortunately, 67.4% of topical corticosteroid
products prescribed were not products of local Palestinian pharmaceutical compa-
nies, whose prices are usually lower than those of the imported brand-name
equivalents. One possible reason for this prescri-bing behaviour is lack of
trust in the quality of the locally produced pharmaceuticals. Another possible
reason is that the undergraduate medical students are not taught proper
prescription writing [29] and when they graduate they mimic the prescribing
behaviour of their more experienced colleagues, who might be influenced by the
strong marketing campaigns of foreign pharmaceutical companies.
Prescription analysis shows that anti-fungal drugs were the most commonly
prescribed class of drugs, suggesting that fungal infections are the most common
type of dermatological condition encountered in north Palestine. Unfortunately,
there are no published epidemiological studies of infectious diseases in
Palestine that would explain this finding. Cross tabulation of antifungal drugs
with topical corticosteroid drug prescribing shows that 104 patients were
prescribed an antifungal drug along with a topical corticosteroid and that 72
patients were prescribed topical drugs containing a combination of an antifungal
plus a topical corticosteroid (e.g. miconazole nitrate 2% plus hydrocortisone
acetate 1%).
The use of topical corticosteroids dur-ing infection may be problematic, even in
healthy individuals with an intact immune system. For example, the use of a
topical corticosteroid during varicella infection has been reported to cause
exacerbation of the viral infection [30]. Topical corticosteroids are often less
effective than antifungal drugs in treating fungal infections [31,32].
Furthermore, when topical corticosteroids are combined with potent antifungal
drugs, they may interfere with the therapeutic action of the antifungal
medications, thus exacerba-
ting the infection (e.g. tinea incognito) [33–35]. Prescribing a
corticosteroid/anti-fungal combination has been found to be more common among
non-dermatologists [36]. This suggests that dermatologists are more aware than
non-dermatologists of the lack of efficacy of topical corticosteroids in the
treatment of these infections. However, in our study, dermatologists had some
tendency to prescribe antifungal/corticosteroid combination.
In conclusion, the present study reveals that topical corticosteroids of
intermediate and highest efficacy are commonly used for outpatients attending
dermatology clinics in north Palestine. Inadequate prescribing information was a
clear characteristic of the dermatological prescriptions contai-
ning topical corticosteroids. Some irrational combinations of topical
corticosteroids may be prescribed. Unfortunately, the curricula of medical
colleges in Palestine do not include a course on proper prescribing, which might
reflect negatively on the future of medical practice. There is, therefore, a
need to put more emphasis on rational and complete prescribing on the
undergraduate medical curriculum in Palestine. Continuing medical education for
practising physicians is also greatly needed.
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