Defined daily doses (DDD) MCQs With Answer

Defined daily doses (DDD) MCQs With Answer

Defined Daily Dose (DDD) is a standardized metric used in drug utilization research and pharmacoepidemiology to compare drug consumption across settings. This introduction covers key concepts such as the ATC/DDD system, calculation methods (DDDs per 1,000 inhabitants per day, DDDs per 100 bed-days), differences between DDD and Prescribed Daily Dose (PDD), strengths, and limitations for B. Pharm students. Understanding DDD aids in evaluating prescribing patterns, benchmarking antibiotic stewardship, and interpreting pharmacoepidemiologic trends. Keywords: Defined Daily Dose, DDD, ATC/DDD, drug utilization, pharmacoepidemiology, DDD/1000 inh/day, PDD, dose standardization. Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.

Q1. What is the primary purpose of the Defined Daily Dose (DDD) system established by WHO?

  • To set legally enforceable dose limits for all medications
  • To provide a standardized unit for measuring drug consumption in populations
  • To replace clinical dosing guidelines for individual patients
  • To determine the retail price of medicines internationally

Correct Answer: To provide a standardized unit for measuring drug consumption in populations

Q2. The ATC in the ATC/DDD system stands for which of the following?

  • Analytical Therapeutic Classification
  • Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical
  • Approved Therapeutic Code
  • Average Treatment Cycle

Correct Answer: Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical

Q3. Which statement best describes the Defined Daily Dose (DDD)?

  • The average dose actually prescribed by physicians for the majority of patients
  • A technical unit assumed average maintenance dose per day for its main indication in adults
  • The minimum effective dose required to achieve therapeutic effect in most patients
  • A maximum safe dose recommended by regulatory agencies

Correct Answer: A technical unit assumed average maintenance dose per day for its main indication in adults

Q4. How does Prescribed Daily Dose (PDD) differ from DDD?

  • PDD is an international standard, while DDD is calculated locally
  • PDD reflects actual prescribed doses in a setting, while DDD is a standardized benchmark
  • PDD is always higher than DDD for all drugs
  • PDD is used only for pediatric dosing while DDD is adult-focused

Correct Answer: PDD reflects actual prescribed doses in a setting, while DDD is a standardized benchmark

Q5. Which formula correctly calculates DDDs per 1,000 inhabitants per day?

  • (Total amount of drug in mg ÷ DDD in mg) × (Population ÷ 1000) × Days
  • ((Total amount of drug in mg ÷ DDD in mg) ÷ (Population × Days)) × 1000
  • Total defined daily doses × 1000
  • ((Population × Days) ÷ (Total amount of drug in mg ÷ DDD in mg)) × 1000

Correct Answer: ((Total amount of drug in mg ÷ DDD in mg) ÷ (Population × Days)) × 1000

Q6. A drug’s total sales equal 60,000 mg over 30 days in a population of 10,000. The DDD is 50 mg. What is the DDDs per 1,000 inhabitants per day? (Round to two decimals)

  • 0.40 DDD/1000 inh/day
  • 0.04 DDD/1000 inh/day
  • 4.00 DDD/1000 inh/day
  • 0.67 DDD/1000 inh/day

Correct Answer: 0.40 DDD/1000 inh/day

Q7. Why is DDD not appropriate for measuring pediatric drug use?

  • DDD is designed for hospital data only
  • DDD is based on adult maintenance doses and does not reflect weight-based pediatric dosing
  • DDD assumes intravenous administration only
  • DDD requires genetic information not usually available for children

Correct Answer: DDD is based on adult maintenance doses and does not reflect weight-based pediatric dosing

Q8. What is a common limitation when using DDD to compare drug use across countries?

  • DDD accounts for differences in disease prevalence automatically
  • Differences in prescribing habits, indication mix, and strengths can bias comparisons
  • DDD includes over-the-counter medicines only
  • DDD values change daily, making comparisons unstable

Correct Answer: Differences in prescribing habits, indication mix, and strengths can bias comparisons

Q9. Which of the following is NOT a standard denominator used in DDD calculations?

  • DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day
  • DDD per 100 bed-days
  • DDD per prescription per month
  • Total DDDs consumed during a study period

Correct Answer: DDD per prescription per month

Q10. In hospital drug utilization, what does DDDs per 100 bed-days measure?

  • Average number of DDDs prescribed per 100 admitted patients per day
  • Average staff-to-patient ratio related to pharmacotherapy
  • Proportion of drugs given as injections versus oral forms
  • Daily defined doses expressed relative to hospital occupancy

Correct Answer: Daily defined doses expressed relative to hospital occupancy

Q11. If a country has high DDD/1000 inhabitants/day for an antibiotic, this might indicate which of the following?

  • Complete absence of bacterial infections
  • Potential overuse or higher access to that antibiotic
  • Strict stewardship and low prescribing rates
  • That the antibiotic is exclusively used for pediatric patients

Correct Answer: Potential overuse or higher access to that antibiotic

Q12. Who maintains and updates the ATC/DDD index used internationally?

  • World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
  • European Medicines Agency (EMA)
  • United Nations Drug Control Program

Correct Answer: World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology

Q13. For a fixed-dose combination product, how is DDD assigned?

  • DDD is never assigned to combination products
  • DDD may be assigned for the combination as a whole if widely used and applicable
  • DDD equals the sum of the DDDs of individual components automatically
  • DDD equals the higher DDD of the components

Correct Answer: DDD may be assigned for the combination as a whole if widely used and applicable

Q14. Which of the following is a correct use of DDD in pharmacoepidemiology?

  • To determine the optimal individual patient dose in clinical care
  • To evaluate temporal trends in population-level drug consumption
  • To diagnose adverse drug reactions in a single patient
  • To set generic substitution rules at the pharmacy

Correct Answer: To evaluate temporal trends in population-level drug consumption

Q15. When comparing PDD to DDD, a PDD much higher than DDD suggests what in that setting?

  • Prescribers use lower doses than international average
  • Prescribers may be treating more severe cases or using higher maintenance doses locally
  • The drug’s DDD is calculated incorrectly
  • The drug is not used in that setting

Correct Answer: Prescribers may be treating more severe cases or using higher maintenance doses locally

Q16. Which metric would be most appropriate to assess antibiotic use in a hospital ward over one month?

  • DDD per 100 bed-days
  • DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day
  • Defined minimum inhibitory concentration
  • Number of prescriptions per pharmacist

Correct Answer: DDD per 100 bed-days

Q17. A study reports 5 DDD/1,000 inhabitants/day for drug X. Interpret this value.

  • On average, 5 out of every 1,000 people take drug X each day at the DDD dose
  • Exactly 5 people in the population use drug X per day
  • Drug X is taken by 50% of the population daily
  • The drug is only used in hospitals

Correct Answer: On average, 5 out of every 1,000 people take drug X each day at the DDD dose

Q18. Which data source is commonly used to calculate DDD at national level?

  • Individual patient bedside medication charts only
  • Aggregate sales or reimbursement data from wholesalers and pharmacies
  • Electronic health record allergy lists
  • Pharmacopoeial monographs

Correct Answer: Aggregate sales or reimbursement data from wholesalers and pharmacies

Q19. What is one reason DDD might misrepresent actual drug exposure in elderly populations?

  • Elderly patients always receive higher-than-DDD doses
  • Age-related pharmacokinetics and dosing adjustments often lead to doses different from adult DDDs
  • DDD is adjusted for renal function automatically
  • DDD is calculated based on pediatric dosing

Correct Answer: Age-related pharmacokinetics and dosing adjustments often lead to doses different from adult DDDs

Q20. Which of the following best describes how DDD values are determined?

  • Randomly assigned by member states
  • Based on typical maintenance dose used for main indication in adults as agreed by experts and WHO
  • Calculated from the median of all prescribed doses worldwide each year
  • Derived solely from clinical trial dosing schedules

Correct Answer: Based on typical maintenance dose used for main indication in adults as agreed by experts and WHO

Q21. You have total DDDs consumed = 1,200 for a 30-day period in a population of 20,000. What is the DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day? (Round to three decimals)

  • 2.000 DDD/1000 inh/day
  • 0.002 DDD/1000 inh/day
  • 2.0000 DDD/1000 inh/day
  • 0.0020 DDD/1000 inh/day

Correct Answer: 2.000 DDD/1000 inh/day

Q22. Which is a recommended action when DDD and clinical practice differ substantially?

  • Ignore DDD metrics entirely as they are invalid
  • Investigate reasons, consider using PDD in analyses, and adjust interpretations for local practices
  • Change national prescribing habits immediately to match DDD
  • Use DDD values for pediatric dosing guidelines

Correct Answer: Investigate reasons, consider using PDD in analyses, and adjust interpretations for local practices

Q23. For chronic drugs used for long-term therapy (e.g., antihypertensives), what advantage does DDD offer?

  • Helps estimate population-level exposure and compare utilization over time or between regions
  • Identifies individual patient adherence precisely
  • Replaces the need for clinical trials
  • Determines exact therapeutic outcomes for each patient

Correct Answer: Helps estimate population-level exposure and compare utilization over time or between regions

Q24. When reporting antibiotic consumption to monitor stewardship, which approach using DDD is most informative?

  • Report absolute DDD counts only without denominators
  • Report DDD per 1,000 inhabitants/day or DDD per 100 bed-days with indication-specific breakdowns
  • Report only number of prescriptions, ignoring dose
  • Report DDD as a percentage of total drug sales only

Correct Answer: Report DDD per 1,000 inhabitants/day or DDD per 100 bed-days with indication-specific breakdowns

Q25. Which scenario could lead to underestimation of actual drug exposure when using DDD?

  • When the prescribed doses are higher than the DDD
  • When the prescribed doses are lower than the DDD
  • When all drugs are administered intravenously
  • When the DDD value equals the PDD

Correct Answer: When the prescribed doses are lower than the DDD

Q26. What should researchers consider when using DDD to study opioids across countries?

  • Differences in formulation, potency, indication mix, and opioid equivalence must be accounted for
  • All opioids have identical DDD values globally
  • Opioid DDDs are irrelevant due to abuse potential
  • DDD automatically adjusts for potency differences

Correct Answer: Differences in formulation, potency, indication mix, and opioid equivalence must be accounted for

Q27. If a new drug has no established DDD, what is the recommended practice for researchers?

  • Invent a DDD value and publish it
  • Use alternative measures (mg per population, PDD) and monitor until WHO assigns a DDD
  • Exclude the drug from any utilization analysis permanently
  • Assume DDD equals 1 mg for convenience

Correct Answer: Use alternative measures (mg per population, PDD) and monitor until WHO assigns a DDD

Q28. Which indicator is most useful to compare hospital antibiotic use adjusted for bed occupancy?

  • DDD per 100 bed-days
  • DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day
  • Defined minimum inhibitory concentration per patient
  • Total number of tablets dispensed

Correct Answer: DDD per 100 bed-days

Q29. When aggregating drug consumption data across strengths and formulations, what is critical to ensure accurate DDD calculations?

  • Convert all quantities to the active substance amount (mg) before calculating DDDs
  • Count each formulation as one DDD irrespective of strength
  • Exclude liquid formulations entirely
  • Use pill counts only without considering strength

Correct Answer: Convert all quantities to the active substance amount (mg) before calculating DDDs

Q30. Which interpretation is correct if a hospital’s DDD/100 bed-days for proton pump inhibitors rises significantly over a year?

  • The hospital has reduced use of proton pump inhibitors
  • There may be increased prescribing, longer durations, changes in case-mix, or formulary changes that require investigation
  • DDD measurement is not sensitive to temporal trends
  • Patients have become more resistant to acid suppression therapy

Correct Answer: There may be increased prescribing, longer durations, changes in case-mix, or formulary changes that require investigation

Author

  • G S Sachin
    : Author

    G S Sachin is a Registered Pharmacist under the Pharmacy Act, 1948, and the founder of PharmacyFreak.com. He holds a Bachelor of Pharmacy degree from Rungta College of Pharmaceutical Science and Research and creates clear, accurate educational content on pharmacology, drug mechanisms of action, pharmacist learning, and GPAT exam preparation.

    Mail- Sachin@pharmacyfreak.com

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