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Algorithm Finds Thousands of Unknown Drug Interaction Side Effects

ananyo writes "An algorithm designed by U.S. scientists to trawl through a plethora of drug interactions has yielded thousands of previously unknown side effects caused by taking drugs in combination (abstract). The work provides a way to sort through the hundreds of thousands of 'adverse events' reported to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration each year. The researchers developed an algorithm that would match data from each drug-exposed patient to a nonexposed control patient with the same condition. The approach automatically corrected for several known sources of bias, including those linked to gender, age and disease. The team then used this method to compile a database of 1,332 drugs and possible side effects that were not listed on the labels for those drugs. The algorithm came up with an average of 329 previously unknown adverse events for each drug — far surpassing the average of 69 side effects listed on most drug labels."

2 of 121 comments (clear)

  1. Say! by sixtyeight · · Score: 5, Funny

    Say! Are there any new prescription drugs out there that I'm not taking, but should be? Those seem pretty safe.

    Perhaps they'll soon come out with glossy color catalogs for the new ones each season. They'll be full of loads of bikini-clad women draped over cars, popping pills.

    --
    The Wolfpack Project: BitCoin + Crowdfunding = Political Accountability
  2. Looks like... by Shazback · · Score: 3, Funny

    They're going to need bigger boxes.