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1 f hepatocytes, consistent with a cholestatic drug reaction.
2 y and herpesviruses in mediating the adverse drug reaction.
3 e (aLQTS) is a serious unpredictable adverse drug reaction.
4 lation via MRGPRX2 and causes pseudoallergic drug reaction.
5 se remission or the occurrence of an adverse drug reaction.
6 ing a rare, potentially fatal, T-cell-driven drug reaction.
7 ory or poor risk assessment of recurrence of drug reaction.
8 o the pathophysiology of this severe adverse drug reaction.
9 considering the increased tremor and adverse drug reactions.
10 variates that influenced the rate of adverse drug reactions.
11 nor, and potentially iatrogenic; and adverse drug reactions.
12 t specific HLA alleles influence the risk of drug reactions.
13 rine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) and adverse drug reactions.
14 tudies advanced the understanding of adverse drug reactions.
15 ils of 10 and 3 reports of suspected adverse drug reactions.
16 e from the eruptions usually associated with drug reactions.
17 g metabolism and have been linked to adverse drug reactions.
18 istance to pathogens and the risk of adverse drug reactions.
19 acotherapy whereas others experience adverse drug reactions.
20  that may underlie susceptibility to adverse drug reactions.
21 metabolites may be involved in idiosyncratic drug reactions.
22 nalysis linking chemical features to adverse drug reactions.
23 bited by variable drug responses and adverse drug reactions.
24 ding compounds is essential to avoid adverse drug reactions.
25 acokinetics, treatment efficacy, and adverse drug reactions.
26  a common target of inflammation and adverse drug reactions.
27 ntibiotic resistance and unnecessary adverse drug reactions.
28 nd reduce the number and severity of adverse drug reactions.
29  and hospital nurses in reporting of adverse drug reactions.
30  distinguish from cytomegalovirus disease or drug reactions.
31  involved in other serious cutaneous adverse drug reactions.
32 annot account for most idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions.
33  histologic changes commonly associated with drug reactions.
34  information on the risks of serious adverse drug reactions.
35  levels, CD4+ lymphocyte counts, and adverse drug reactions.
36 national normalized ratio (INR), and adverse drug reactions.
37 esponses, and cause life-threatening adverse drug reactions.
38 emerging research identifies various adverse drug reactions.
39 nteractions account for up to 30% of adverse drug reactions.
40 o serum from patients with cutaneous adverse drug reactions.
41 ferences in therapeutic efficacy and adverse drug reactions.
42 ers or therapeutic targets for these adverse drug reactions.
43 reported all AEs, as opposed to only adverse drug reactions.
44  diverse populations in the study of adverse drug reactions.
45 and are at higher risk of developing adverse drug reactions.
46 used to measure costs to treat these adverse drug reactions.
47 erapy without increasing the risk of adverse drug reactions.
48 ne interindividual susceptibility to adverse drug reactions.
49 ased screening assays for testing individual drug reactions.
50 ose existing drugs and identify rare adverse drug reactions.
51 le focussed on HLA associations with adverse drug reactions.
52 r both predictable ADRs and hypersensitivity drug reactions.
53 ns most commonly involved in serious adverse drug reactions.
54 r serious drug-drug interactions and adverse drug reactions.
55 ce system was put in place to detect adverse drug reactions.
56 t of grade 3 or higher, including 15 adverse drug reactions (11 hepatic events, all but 2 of which oc
57 or additional drug therapy (31%) and adverse drug reactions (18%) being the most common problems iden
58 n the Text Analysis Conference (TAC) Adverse Drug Reaction 2017 challenge test data set, consisting o
59               We recorded no serious adverse drug reactions; 28 adverse events, most commonly nausea,
60 HF (11 paracetamol overdose, 2 idiosyncratic drug reaction, 3 Wilson's disease) were available.
61 cidences of adverse events (AEs) and adverse drug reactions (33%) were low, no serious AEs were study
62 cidences of adverse events (AEs) and adverse drug reactions (33%) were low, no serious AEs were study
63 without any increase in incidence of adverse drug reactions (4% vs 3%; P = .4).
64 % for ST-Cefaz) and highest rates of adverse drug reactions (5.2% vs 4.6% for Hx-Cefaz and 4.7% for S
65        Ritonavir was associated with adverse drug reactions about twice as frequently as indinavir or
66 ulitis-mimicking oncologic adverse cutaneous drug reactions (ACDRs), pseudocellulitis may be difficul
67 ng to clinical efficacy, inefficacy, adverse drug reaction (ADR), and other medical causes.
68 k of short- (9%) and long-term (30%) adverse drug reaction (ADR); (2) an 80-year-old woman with low r
69                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) accounted for the majority of drug
70   Two spontaneously reported serious adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and 32 spontaneously reported nons
71  score (TCRS), adverse events (AEs), adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and immunological response (IgE, I
72 es identifying HLA associations with adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and one for the examination of inf
73                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are a central consideration during
74                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are a common cause of attrition in
75                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are a relatively common cause of m
76                 Immune-mediated (IM) adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are an underrecognized source of p
77                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are commonplace and occur when a d
78                                      Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) are of great public health concern
79                        Idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are one of the most common causes
80 the study was to investigate whether adverse drug reactions (ADRs) during immunotherapy with a grass
81                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) harm patients and are costly for h
82 portant tool for predicting clinical adverse drug reactions (ADRs) of investigational drugs.
83 te the impact of self-reported NSAID adverse drug reactions (ADRs) on risk of OUD, adjusting for othe
84                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) pose critical public health issues
85 est (AESIs), serious AEs (SAEs), and adverse drug reactions (ADRs) reported during postinjection visi
86                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) requiring closer monitoring or cha
87  be more likely to have unrecognized adverse drug reactions (ADRs) than established drugs, but no rec
88 the one-strength regimen caused more adverse drug reactions (ADRs) than the Standard regimen (p = .04
89 neous reports do not reliably detect adverse drug reactions (ADRs) that occur widely separated in tim
90  pharmaceutical companies can report adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to pharmacovigilance databases.
91                                      Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to tuberculosis (TB) medications m
92 ify whether phenotypes indicative of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) were enriched in drug-exposed indi
93 ntion and 0.1% (23) death related to adverse drug reactions (ADRs) were reported.
94 n older adults increases the risk of adverse drug reactions (ADRs), but studying this relationship is
95 t carbamazepine 1 is associated with adverse drug reactions (ADRs), including hepatotoxicity; oxidati
96 of 14% of patients experienced minor adverse drug reactions (ADRs), of which 2 cases demonstrated fla
97 ) participants experienced 1 or more adverse drug reactions (ADRs), of which 38 (10.5%) and 98 (27.1%
98          Use of medication can cause adverse drug reactions (ADRs), unwanted or unexpected events, wh
99 ephalosporin or incidence of serious adverse drug reactions (ADRs).
100 the incidence and timing of onset of adverse drug reactions (ADRs).
101 that monitors, detects, and prevents adverse drug reactions (ADRs).
102  these are associated with a risk of adverse drug reactions (ADRs).
103 e classified by the investigators as adverse drug reactions (ADRs).
104 thiopurine therapy because of severe adverse drug reactions (ADRs); leukopenia is one of the most ser
105 nization's (WHO) global database for adverse drug reactions, ADRs, VigiAccess.
106 fy key terms, such as adverse event, adverse drug reaction, adverse drug event, medication error, and
107 s DILI cases reported to the Swedish Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory Committee (1970-2004) for any si
108 patient susceptibility to developing adverse drug reactions, although the underlying mechanism is not
109 anism of undesirable drug effects or adverse drug reactions among those compounds, we examined their
110 ge) between the identification of an adverse drug reaction and the subsequent onset of drug-induced i
111                        Collection of adverse drug reactions and anticancer activity attributable to t
112  that are commonly seen with both historical drug reactions and during drug challenges, and it would
113       DDIs are an important cause of adverse drug reactions and exact a large toll on the health care
114 e employed with caution for risk of systemic drug reactions and hypertensive events in middle-aged an
115 , a failure to routinely incorporate adverse drug reactions and serum metabolite monitoring in study
116                    The occurrence of adverse drug reactions and somnolence were observed in 19.7% and
117                   Thiopurine-related adverse drug reactions and thiopurine failure are frequent.
118 toms mimicking more common, entities such as drug reactions and viral syndromes.
119 the incidence of clinically relevant adverse drug reactions and was feasible across diverse European
120 he liver adapts to fasting, adverse diabetes drug reactions, and cancer.
121 used to assess treatment completion, adverse drug reactions, and factors associated with treatment di
122 ngth of stay, additional procedures, adverse drug reactions, and hospital-acquired infections.
123 uous drugs, polypharmacology-related adverse drug reactions, and multi-drug therapies, especially can
124                                     Xerosis, drug reactions, and neuropathy should be considered when
125                                      Adverse drug reactions are a frequent culprit.
126                                      Adverse drug reactions are a significant cause of morbidity and
127                                      Adverse drug reactions are a significant public health problem t
128 tionally, contact dermatitis, urticaria, and drug reactions are addressed in this review.
129 eatment failure due to resistance or adverse drug reactions are common, asking for new therapeutic st
130                        Although many adverse drug reactions are considered nonpreventable, recent dev
131              Immune-mediated type IV adverse drug reactions are idiosyncratic in nature, generally no
132 Schemes for spontaneous reporting of adverse drug reactions are important to post-marketing safety su
133                 Incidents of adverse cardiac drug reactions are more common in patients with preexist
134                        Idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions are unpredictable, dose-independent and p
135 ach to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole adverse drug reaction assessment and rechallenge to optimize pro
136                                Three adverse drug reaction assessment instruments were used to determ
137 e was to determine the prevalence of adverse drug reactions associated with off-label use and evaluat
138 ating that doctors should report all adverse drug reactions associated with them to the Committee on
139 iscontinuation of treatment owing to adverse drug reactions) associated with amitriptyline (off-label
140          To improve the detection of adverse drug reactions at our hospital, we utilized electronic m
141 ypes can range from life-threatening adverse drugs reactions at one end of the spectrum to equally se
142 te adenovirus infections or systemic adverse drug reactions, but levels in patients with KD were not
143  studied in other types of cutaneous adverse drug reactions (cADRs).
144                                     Rarely a drug reaction can affect both organs concurrently.
145 s that increase the risk of life-threatening drug reactions can be clinically silent before drug expo
146          A total of 37,848 dupilumab adverse drug reaction cases were reported, with skin, eye, and m
147 ed thrombocytopenia, a prothrombotic adverse drug reaction caused by immunoglobulin G directed agains
148 e in three market withdrawals due to adverse drug reactions, causing preventable human suffering and
149 rmal necrolysis are severe adverse cutaneous drug reactions characterized by widespread skin and muco
150  Baseline and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug reaction clinical data were correlated with cell ch
151  risk of presenting with a cutaneous adverse drug reaction compared with non-sulfonamides and that me
152 tify and characterize cardiovascular adverse drug reactions (CV-ADR) associated with ibrutinib.
153 ts are derived mainly from voluntary adverse drug reaction databases, they might be prone to reportin
154 ug levels, which are associated with adverse drug reactions, delayed treatment response, and relapse.
155 d evidence of a systemic or life-threatening drug reaction, developed a systemic drug eruption, or ha
156 and the number of harmful and severe adverse drug reactions did not differ for medications used for F
157                             Although adverse drug reactions do not occur more frequently with off-lab
158 had 48 trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole adverse drug reactions documented either at baseline or during t
159                     Tremor rates and adverse drug reactions favoured the placebo group.
160 ence for a genetic predisposition to adverse drug reactions, focusing on gene variants producing alte
161                        The number of adverse drug reactions for medications administered and the numb
162 dications that are associated with lichenoid drug reactions; four patients were postmenopausal; and a
163 graphics, costs, outcomes (including adverse drug reactions, functional status, ventilator time in ho
164                      Patients with cutaneous drug-reaction had higher proportion of eosinophilia duri
165                             Hypersensitivity drug reactions (HDRs) represent a large and important he
166 ommon medicines involved in hypersensitivity drug reactions (HDRs) to NSAIDs, no patient series studi
167 telets, leading to the prothrombotic adverse drug reaction heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT).
168 e associated with an immune-mediated adverse drug reaction, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia.
169 ause of anaphylaxis in a small percentage of drug reactions; however, diagnosis of PEG allergy is com
170                        Idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions (IADRs) encompass a diverse group of toxi
171 ve metabolites in many idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions (IADRs).
172 ntipsychotic treatment by preventing adverse drug reactions, improving treatment efficacy or relievin
173 nto the molecular mechanisms of this adverse drug reaction in adult patients with germ cell testicula
174 are but potentially life-threatening adverse drug reaction in patients receiving angiotensin-converti
175 7; P = .0001), with no recurrence of adverse drug reactions in 74%.
176 a risk factor for the development of adverse drug reactions in an adult ICU population.
177 a novel method to better investigate adverse drug reactions in chemical space.
178                                      Adverse drug reactions in children are an important public healt
179 sting does not predict some forms of adverse drug reactions in humans.
180 lpful in identification of potential adverse drug reactions in mono as well as combination therapy re
181 nce techniques to reduce the risk of adverse drug reactions in patients receiving warfarin.
182 ated to calculate incidence rates of adverse drug reactions in the community from spontaneous reports
183 group) or amiodarone side effects or adverse drug reactions (in the rhythm-control group).
184 orter genes previously implicated in adverse drug reactions including simvastatin-induced myopathy an
185                                      Adverse drug reactions, including severe patient bleeding, may o
186 lly involved in dupilumab-associated adverse drug reactions, including the fibroblast GF receptor (in
187        It was found that the rate of adverse drug reactions increases by 8% for every one additional
188              Differential diagnosis includes drug reactions, infections, graft-versus-host disease (G
189 variety of manifestations, including adverse drug reactions, inflammatory conditions, bacterial immun
190 idermal necrolysis (TEN) is a severe adverse drug reaction involving extensive keratinocyte death in
191                    Potential hepatic adverse drug reaction is a safety concern associated with the us
192 nintended 'off-targets' that predict adverse drug reactions is daunting by empirical methods alone.
193 nintended 'off-targets' that predict adverse drug reactions, is a daunting task by experimental appro
194 t, yet its use is limited by several adverse drug reactions, known as cisplatin-induced toxicities (C
195 ed cardiotoxicity (ACT) is a serious adverse drug reaction limiting anthracycline use and causing sub
196                  One risk factor for adverse drug reactions may be age.
197 enal transplant recipients, reported adverse drug reactions may limit use and increase reliance on co
198                                      Adverse drug reactions, morning peak flow (mPEF) and asthma symp
199 anation for HLA-linked idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions, namely that drugs can alter the repertoi
200 a given drug, creating a drug-target-adverse drug reaction network.
201 parathyroid hormone, the most common adverse drug reactions (No./total No.) were nausea (iron isomalt
202 drug (n=1558), a clinically relevant adverse drug reaction occurred in 152 (21.0%) of 725 patients in
203 no life-threatening severe cutaneous adverse drug reactions occurred, and the decision for drug thera
204 is/granulocytopenia (CIAG), a severe adverse drug reaction occurring in up to 1% of treated individua
205 induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an adverse drug reaction occurring in up to 5% of patients exposed
206 is a relatively common prothrombotic adverse drug reaction of unusual pathogenesis that features plat
207    By integrating data sources about adverse drug reactions of drugs with an established cheminformat
208  2 reactions are more likely to be immediate drug reactions of moderate severity.
209 g the lack of therapeutic benefit or adverse drug reactions of PGx targeted drugs.
210 tevens-Johnson syndrome are severe cutaneous drug reactions of unknown mechanism.
211 nduced taste disturbance is a common adverse drug reaction often triggered by drug secretion into sal
212 on of drug use because of concern for severe drug reaction or incorrect presumption of disease relaps
213        These events might be responsible for drug reactions or development of certain diseases.
214  enhance drug metabolism (leading to adverse drug reactions) or inhibit inflammation.
215 ns (P = .059); 78.3% and 45.2% had 1 adverse drug reactions (P < .001); and post-treatment QFT conver
216  9H groups, respectively, developed systemic drug reactions (P = .059); 78.3% and 45.2% had 1 adverse
217 nd patient-reported clinical events, adverse drug reactions, patient quality of life (EQ-5D-5L) and h
218          Secondary outcomes included adverse drug reaction, PICC line complication, and a composite o
219 armacogenomic Testing for Preventing Adverse Drug Reactions (PREPARE), a multicenter, controlled, ope
220 uisition cost, and costs of treating adverse drug reactions probably or possibly related to study dru
221  involving AAD can result in serious adverse drug reactions ranging from arrhythmia recurrence, failu
222 s of clinicians on the spectrum of cutaneous drug reaction related to entecavir therapy.
223         Three subjects reported mild adverse drug reactions related to FCM; two of these were conside
224                    Our institutional adverse drug reaction reporting program was used to identify any
225                                         When drug reactions resembling allergy occur, they are called
226  associated with allergic and pseudoallergic drug reactions, respectively.
227 d to determine the probability of an adverse drug reaction resulting from drug therapy.
228 ons during hypothermia and increased adverse drug reaction risk complicates concurrent pharmacotherap
229 s with the strongest associations to adverse drug reaction risk in the intensive care unit are presen
230  more frequently with off-label use, adverse drug reaction risk increases with each additional off-la
231 other outcomes, including nonserious adverse drug reactions (RR, 0.92 [95% CI, 0.58-1.46]), injurious
232 quently discovered to have suspected adverse drug reactions (SADRs).
233                                      Adverse drug reaction screens in a kidney panel revealed no off-
234 e identified clinically significant systemic drug reactions (SDR) and evaluated risk factors in patie
235 cent advances in pharmacogenetics of adverse drug reactions show promise, the small size of the popul
236  literature documenting the risk for adverse drug reactions specific to bleeding and/or clotting with
237                We included 18 of 333 adverse drug reaction studies and 22 of 61 variant allele review
238 ochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation and adverse drug reactions such as idiosyncratic drug-induced liver
239 st cause of life-threatening immune-mediated drug reactions that are considered off-target, including
240 n of the role that genetics plays in adverse drug reactions that are either predictable extensions of
241 ve of pharmacovigilance is to detect adverse drug reactions that are unknown or novel in terms of the
242  reactions are common clinical acute adverse drug reactions that can exacerbate a patient's condition
243 ole of the adaptive immune system in adverse drug reactions that target the liver has not been define
244 th Organization's classification for adverse drug reactions, the association between bortezomib use a
245              In an effort to prevent adverse drug reactions, the FDA mandates the evaluation of the p
246 ssed daily for the development of an adverse drug reaction through active surveillance.
247 thy should be recognized as an idiosyncratic drug reaction to many NSAIDS.
248 s any clinical event described as an adverse drug reaction to one or more drugs.
249 lly lethal, immunologically mediated adverse drug reaction to unfractionated heparin or, less commonl
250  cholesterol levels that could cause adverse drug reactions to cholesterol-lowering drugs such as sta
251 that may be associated with the rare adverse drug reaction torsades de pointes.
252 rescribe include present or expected adverse drug reactions, unnecessary polypharmacy, and the need t
253  find associations between drugs and adverse drug reactions using disproportionate Bayesian-reporting
254 ing concern over potentially serious adverse drug reactions warrants an evaluation of post marketing
255 2 clinical and/or grade 3 laboratory adverse drug reaction was reported, leading to delayed therapy a
256                     The incidence of adverse drug reactions was 9.4% (5 of 53), and all of the advers
257             Severity and harm of the adverse drug reaction were also assessed.
258                             Rates of adverse drug reaction were low (<4% in both groups) but slightly
259 rce utilization associated with each adverse drug reaction were used to measure costs to treat these
260  SSG/PM efficacies were similar, and adverse drug reactions were as expected given the drugs safety p
261              One hundred and sixteen adverse drug reactions were categorized dichotomously (Food and
262  The incidence and severity of other adverse drug reactions were comparable between the 2 groups.
263                           Unexpected adverse drug reactions were found in the "intestinal obstruction
264                                      Adverse drug reactions were less common in the TMP-SMX plus plac
265              Discontinuations due to adverse drug reactions were lowest for TDF+FTC+RAL (1.9%; 95% CI
266 s was 9.4% (5 of 53), and all of the adverse drug reactions were mild.
267                      The most common adverse drug reactions were ocular side effects, including hyper
268 tions was 3.2% in the intravenous group, and drug reactions were rare in both groups (intravenous: 0.
269                                Three adverse drug reactions were regarded as both serious and unexpec
270                                      Adverse drug reactions were reported by 1174 (35.7%) patients, o
271                                      Adverse drug reactions were reported by 30.6% of patients; 5.2%
272 ) of 51 events classified as serious adverse drug reactions were reported.
273                           No serious adverse drug reactions were reported.
274  but no suspected unexpected serious adverse drug reactions were seen.
275 airs (305 associated with at least 1 adverse drug reaction) were reported.
276 ociated with serious T cell-mediated adverse drug reactions, which has led to preventive screening st
277 occus aureus sinusitis, and multiple adverse drug reactions whose T cells were unable to produce IFN-
278 enetic variants associated with this adverse drug reaction will further our mechanistic understanding
279 es virus (HHV) reactivation is well known in drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptom (DR
280       Drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome/drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
281  is a major mechanism in the pathogenesis of drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
282 often severe DHR and started in 14/25 with a drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
283 vens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS), and 11 cases of Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms (D
284 uses (HHVs) contribute to the development of drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
285  added significantly to our understanding of drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
286 and toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS/TEN) and drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
287                                              Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms (D
288                                              Drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
289                                              Drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
290 ause of the severe hypersensitivity syndrome drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
291                                              Drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
292                                              Drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
293 ersensitivity syndrome (DIHS), also known as drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (D
294                          One serious case of drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms oc
295                                       In the drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms su
296 ar to the more severe eczema vaccinatum, and drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms sy
297 DRs, such as drug hypersensitivity syndrome, drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms sy
298    HLA class I associations with SJS/TEN and drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms/dr
299 ions are suggestive of a potential immediate drug reaction with mild symptoms.
300       Less than 1% of women reported adverse drug reactions, with no increase in HIV-positive women o

 
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