The document provides background information on a lecture about pharmacovigilance. It discusses key topics like the importance of pharmacovigilance, drug safety in practice, the need to monitor drug safety, and how pharmacovigilance is organized. The learning objectives are to understand the definition of pharmacovigilance, what constitutes a serious side effect, the history of important side effects that have influenced the field, and how drug safety is organized in the Netherlands and Europe.
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Understanding Pharmacovigilance: Detecting Adverse Drug Reactions
1. Author: Netherlands Pharmacovigilance Centre Lareb
Version date: 14 Nov 2017
Content: This hand-out describes general aspects on
pharmacovigilance and provides background
information on the lecture ‘Introduction PV’, by
Prof. Dr. E.P. van Puijenbroek, The Netherlands.
This lecture can be used for teaching key aspect
1: Understanding the importance of PV.
3. • Introduction of pharmacovigilance
• Drug safety in practice
• Need for monitoring the safety of drugs
• Organisation of pharmacovigilance
Outline
4. • Have knowledge of the definition of pharmacovigilance
• What is a “serious” side effect, according to the formal
definition.
• Peruse the history of pharmacovigilance and a number of
side effects that have played a role.
• Knowledge on how safety of medicines in the Netherlands
and Europe are organised
Learning objectives ‘Introduction’
6. Pharmacovigilance
WHO:
‘The science and activities relating to the detection, assessment,
understanding and prevention of adverse drug effects or any other
drug related problem’
The Importance of Pharmacovigilance, WHO 2002
8. A response to a drug which is noxious and unintended, and
which occurs at doses normally used in man for
prophylaxis, diagnosis, therapy or for the modifications
of physiological function
Definition WHO
Adverse Drug Reaction
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14. Terminology
• ADE: Adverse Drug Event
- Medical occurrence temporally associated with the use of a medicinal
product, but not necessarily causally related
- Not consistent with applicable product information or characteristics of
drug
• AE: Adverse Event
- Medical occurence which is not necessarily causally related to the use of
a drug, and might rely on coincidence
• Definition WHO
- Response of drug action in a person, resulting in experienced harm
15. Seriousness of ADRs
• A medical event that gives rise to one or more of the
following
- Death
- Life-threatening situations
- Hospitalization or prolongation thereof
- Permanent incapacity or disability
- Birth defects
- Other medically important conditions
16. • Introduction pharmacovigilance
• Drug safety in Practice
• Need for monitoring the safety of drugs
• Organisation of pharmacovigilance
Outline
17. Question
• Which part of hospital admissions is caused by an adverse
drug reaction?
1. 2%
2. 6%
3. 11%
4. 23%
18. • 22 hospitals throughout the Netherlands
• 40 days all hospital admissions were screened and
classified as drug-related or non-drug-related
19. • 2.4% of all hospital admissions is drug related
• 5.6% of all acute admissions
• Mortality 6.6%
• 46% preventable
• In the elderly risk twice as high
20. Successive study on medication
safety
Final report:
• Following previous studies on possibly avoidable hospital related
admissions to medication
• Evaluating recommendations to reduce possible harm
• Updating data on HARM related admissions
21. Final report: Successive study on medication safety in The Netherlands, 2017 Vervolgonderzoek
Medicatieveiligheid: Erasmus MC/NIVEL/Radboud UMC/PHARMO; jan 2017
Number
of
admissions
in
The
Netherlands
Acute admissions in NL
Acute admissions in > 65 in
NL
Drug-related admissions > 65
in NL
3,9% 3,9% 4,0% 4,2%
Drug-related admissions > 65% /
all acute admissions (%)
Drug-related admissions > 65% /
acute admissions > 65 (%)
10,0% 10,1% 10,4% 10,4%
22. Avoidable hospital admissions
Vervolgonderzoek Medicatieveiligheid: Erasmus
MC/NIVEL/Radboud UMC/PHARMO; jan 2017
Comparison of Dutch studies on prevalence of drug related hospital admissions and
their potential avoidability.
AZ: Acute admissions
VM: Successive study on medication safety
Study year net prevalence drug related admissions Avoidability
23. Avoidable hospital admissions
Vervolgonderzoek Medicatieveiligheid: Erasmus MC/NIVEL/Radboud UMC/PHARMO; jan 2017
RAS= renin angiotensin system; TAI thrombocyte aggregation inhibitor; VKA= vitamin K antagonist
32. What has been changed because of
thalidomide?
• Five years between first victim and the withdrawal
of thalidomide from the market
• Establishment of Medicines Evaluation Boards
worldwide
• Establishment of spontaneous reporting centers to
identify potential adverse drug reaction in an early
stage
33. What has been changed because of
thalidomide?
• Drug is back on the market and is now used for the
treatment of, for example
- Leprosy
- HIV / AIDS complications
- Multiple myeloma (multiple myeloma)
• New cases of congenital malformations, despite
precautionary measures
34. Di-ethylstilbestrol (DES)
• Synthetic oestrogen for the prevention of miscarriages
- On the Dutch market from 1947-1976
- Warning NTvG 1972
- Ministry of Health issued warning not to use DES anymore in 1974
• In children of mothers who used DES there is an increasred
risk of
- cervical cancer (Clear Cell Adenocarcinoma)
- deviations in the shape of the uterus
38. Frequencies
Term Numerical rate Percentage rate
Very common More than 1 in 10 10% or higher
Common 1 in 10 – 1 in 100 10% – 1%
Uncommon 1 in 100 – 1 in 1000 0.1% to 1%
Rare 1 in 1000 – 1 in 10,000 0.01% to 0.1%
Very rare Less than 1 in 10,000 Less than 0.01%
40. Limitations of pre-clinical studies
• No children
• No elderly
• Not pregnant
• Little or no comorbidity
• Little or no use concomitant medications
• Limited numbers
• ADRs with long time onset hard to detect
41.
42. Dutch population
Number of persons
Age Men Women
Population in The
Netherlands2013,
Central Bureau Statistics
43. Dutch population: trial population
Number of persons
Age Men Women
Population in The
Netherlands2013,
Central Bureau Statistics
46. • Introduction pharmacovigilance
• Drug safety in Practice
• Need for monitoring the safety of drugs
• Organisation of pharmacovigilance
Outline
47. Organisation drug safety
• Extensive research before drug reaches the market
• At the time of market authorization has balance safety /
efficacy good
• In post-marketing (Phase IV) more knowledge
open approach: spontaneous reporting
when needed additional studies
• Combination of knowledge is used to monitor balance safety /
efficacy
48. Parties involved in drug safety
• Medicines Evaluation Board
• Netherlands Pharmacovigilance centre
• Healthcare professionals and patients
• Marketing Authorization Holders
• Inspectorate of health
• EMA
• WHO
49.
50. • Founded in 1991
• Maintaining voluntary reporting scheme, since 1995
• Responsible for the safety of vaccines and the
Teratology Information Service, since 2011
• Independent organization
• Subsidized by the Ministry of Health
• Reports safety signals to the Medicines Evaluation
Board
• WHO Collaborating Centre for Pharmacovigilance in
Education and Patient Reporting
Netherlands Pharmacovigilance
Centre Lareb
51. • Healthcare professionals should immediately report any suspected
serious adverse reactions to a body of professionals and patient
organizations as referred to in Article 76, paragraph three, and any
suspected transmission via a medicinal product of infectious agents
Reporting mandatory in the
Netherlands
52.
53. Medicines Evaluation Board (CBG)
• Signalling and Analysing as yet unknown adverse events
- Identifying adverse events (partially from Lareb)
- Evaluation of PSURs
• Final risk/benefit assessment
• Determine actions to be taken i.e. by
- Amendment of SmPC
- Dear Health Care Professional letter
- Suspension of withdrawal of drug
54. Which actions can be taken?
• Amendment Summary of product characteristics
- New update
- Warning
- Contraindication
- Mitigate indication of use
• Temporary suspension of drug
• Withdraw drug from market
• Informing medical professionals by a “Dear Healthcare
Professional Communication” (DHPC)
• Initiate additional reasearch into the safety of a drug
55. Marketing Autorization Holder
• Monitoring safety of own products on a continuous basis
- Spontaneous reports
- Evaluation of studies
- Literature
• Periodic Safety Update Reports
• If applicable, apply for an update in the product information
in between
56. Periodic Safety Update Report
• Overview of serious and non-serious adverse reactions worldwide
• Frequency
- a PSUR every six months for the first two years after being placed on
the market
- during the following two years a PSUR every year
- thereafter at three-yearly intervals
- If needed more often…
• Is change in SmPC needed?
57. European Medicines Agency
• Reports are forwarded to the Eudravigilance database of the
European Medicines Agency
• Registration
- National (National Authorised products)
- Central (Central Authorised products)
• Signal Detection via member states
- National level
- Central level
58. Pharmacovigilance Risk Assessment
Committee
• Provide advise on safety medicinal products authorised in
the EU
• Investigation of ADRs to enable effective assessment and
management of risk during any phase in product life cycle
59. • Evaluation of potential signals
• Provision of advice on confirmation and quantification of
risk and on regulatory options;
• Risk management
• Monitoring regulatory action and the outcomes
• Setting standards for procedures and methodologies
Key responsibilities
62. Other parties involved: UMC
101 Official Member Countries (dark blue)
32 Associate Member (medium blue)
63.
64. WHO/UMC
• Receipt, analysis and recording of worldwide adverse event data
• Maintenance and screening of the international database
• Studies on WHO database
• Training courses and meetings on pharmacovigilance
66. Where to find information on drug safety?
1. Website EMA: central registered products
2. Website national MEB (CBG): all other products
3. KNMP - Informatorium Medicamentorum (for pharmacists)
4. Farmacotherapeutisch Kompas (free access)
5. Website Netherlands PV centre Lareb: spontaneous reports; not always
a causal relationship!
• 1 and 2 official information
• Other sources additional and interpreted information
68. • Have knowledge of the definition of pharmacovigilance
• What is a “serious” side effect, according to the formal
definition.
• Peruse the history of pharmacovigilance and a number of
side effects that have played a role:
• Knowledge on how safety of medicines in the Netherlands
and Europe are organised
Learning Objectives introduction
69. 1. Participants in a clinical trial are usually young male volunteers, who
are healthy, do not use medication and have a healthy lifestyle.
2. The conditions in a clinical trial are not ideal for adherence.
3. After a drug has been registered, users of the drug are not allowed to
smoke or drink alcohol if participants in the clinical trials were not
allowed to do so either
4. Pregnant women do not have to be included in clinical trials before a
new drug can be granted marketing authorization
Exam Question (example)
Which statement(s) is or are CORRECT?
Editor's Notes
9-11-2017 RvE
This presentation has had amandments for sharing purposes on the WHO PV undergraduate education webportal.