1 Department of Social and Administrative Pharmacy. Afe Babalola University, Nigeria.
2 Healthcare Researchers - United Kingdom.
3 Prama and Draah Care Essence Hospital Ltd, Nigeria.
4 Lumen Health Partners, Research and Development Nigeria.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 26(03), 1320-1335
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2025.26.3.2282
Received on 04 May 2025; revised on 07 June 2025; accepted on 09 June 2025
The detection of drug interactions remains a critical challenge in clinical practice, with potential consequences ranging from therapeutic failure to severe adverse events. This study evaluates the performance of ChatGPT in identifying drug interactions compared to established clinical tools, including Medscape, Lexicomp, and Drugs.com. Using a dataset of 250 commonly prescribed medication combinations, we assessed accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and response comprehensiveness across platforms. ChatGPT demonstrated 78.6% overall accuracy, compared to 94.2% for Lexicomp, 91.8% for Medscape, and 89.4% for Drugs.com. While ChatGPT excelled in providing comprehensive explanations of interaction mechanisms (mean score 4.2/5 versus 3.8/5 for traditional tools), it exhibited lower sensitivity in detecting critical interactions (76.3% versus 93.7% for established tools) and higher false favorable rates for certain drug classes. Our findings suggest that while ChatGPT shows promise as a supplementary tool, particularly for generating patient-friendly explanations, it currently lacks the reliability necessary for standalone use in clinical decision-making. This research highlights the potential and limitations of large language models in drug interaction screening and emphasizes the need for continuous validation and refinement before implementation in clinical practice.
Drug interactions; ChatGPT; Large language models; Clinical decision support; Medication safety; Artificial intelligence
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Shaleye Anuoluwapo Bukola, Oluchi Uzoaru Anyom, Simene Baribie Sangha and Elo-Oghene Imonifano. Bridging AI and medication safety: Comparative evaluation of ChatGPT's drug interaction detection capabilities. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 26(3), 1320-1335. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.26.3.2282