User:Celestenoelle.bustria/Evaluate an Article

Which article are you evaluating?
Finerenone

Why you have chosen this article to evaluate?
(Briefly explain why you chose it, why it matters, and what your preliminary impression of it was.)

During my Concentrated Health Systems IPPE at Cedars Sinai, a patient I performed a discharge reconciliation for was on Finerenone. Upon researching the drug, I discovered it was initially approved in the United States in 2021. As a student pharmacist, I'm responsible for learning new drugs on the market constantly and how they might apply to my future patients' optimized therapy. This article is quite short and lacks detail compared to other drugs that have been on market for longer.

Evaluate the article
(Compose a detailed evaluation of the article here, considering each of the key aspects listed above. Consider the guiding questions, and check out the examples of what a useful Wikipedia article evaluation looks like.)

The article's lead concisely and effectively introduces the topic. Beginning the lead is a clear clinical definition of what Finerenone is, and the paragraphs following it provide a brief overview of what the subsequent sections will cover, including its pharmacology, approved indication and toxicity. The current sections are certainly relevant to the topic but require more detail. For instance, the adverse effects section does well in reporting what the most common effects are and their presenting symptoms. This section is missing relevant research about reported adverse effects. Some sections that are missing and should be added are drug interactions and Finerenone's use in pregnant and/or breastfeeding populations. For the article as is, it adopts a neutral tone and is written clearly and succinctly with minimal grammatical errors. The sources and references used are current, with many of them being from the past 2 years. The article utilizes a mixture of reliable sources including government-cited clinical trials, the FDA, drug databases, and academic journals. The only media included in the article thus far is the chemical structure, which is public domain and adheres to Wikipedia's copyright regulations. Currently, there are no discussions on its Talk page. The article belongs to two WikiProjects: Pharmacology and Medicine.