Safety issues of drug use - WHO archives
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Transcript Safety issues of drug use - WHO archives
Safety issues of drug use
WHO/EDM Technical briefing seminar
2 October 2002
Geneva
Lembit Rägo, MD, PhD
Coordinator,Quality Assurance and Safety: Medicines
Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy
Health Technology and Pharmaceuticals Cluster
World Health Organization
E-mail: [email protected]
Pharmaceutical gaps
Very different regulatory environments, and likely
very different priorities for regulators
Huge differences exist in regulatory environment - from 191
WHO Member States
One third have advanced regulatory systems
One third have some regulatory systems
One third have practically no functioning regulatory
systems
How to guarantee safety in circumstances where regulatory
framework is either absent or functioning poorly?
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WHO essential drugs & medicines strategy 4 objectives guide country, regional, global work
(http://www.who.int/medicines)
1. National Drug Policy
guide to coordination of action by all stakeholders
2. Access
selection, financing, pricing, supply systems
3. Quality and safety
standards, effective regulation, information support
4. Rational use
health professionals and consumers,
public and private
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What is WHO doing in order to reduce quality and
safety, and in general regulatory gaps?
Supporting capacity building and training of regulators
Issuing norms and standards
Preparing guidance materials
How to fight counterfeit drugs
How to register generic drugs
How to set up pharmacovigilance centers
Preparing training materials
Quality Assurance, vol. 1 and 2; TRS publications
Validated GMP training modules on CD-rom
GCP training modules under creation ...
Facilitating information exchange
WHO Drug Information, WHO Pharmaceutical Newsletter, Rapid
Alerts, increasing information on the web site Biennial International Conferences of Drug Regulatory Authorities
(ICDRAs)
Annual meetings of National Pharmacovigilance Centers
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History of drug safety (1)
2002 - 154 years of pharmacovigilance
29.01.1848 15 year old Hannah Greener died in course
of routine anaesthesia with chloroform (problem:
ingrown nail of toe; fibrillation of ventricles?). Lancet’i
initiated foundation of a commission and starting
collection of notifications about side effects (1893)
1906 - US Federal Food and Drug Act (required, that the
pharmaceuticals should be “pure” and “free of any
contamination”, nothing was said about the efficacy)
1936 - USA-s 107 lethal cases (diethylenglycol was
used to solubilize sulphanilamides); the law was
amended in 1938
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History of drug safety (2): after thalidomide
era
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1961 - Dr William McBride (Australia) reported 20% increase in
foetal abnormalities and significant increase of phocomelia in
relation with thalidomide use, later numerous reports from other
countries (more than 4000 cases)
1962 - USA Kefauver-Harrise amendment to the law
(requirement to prove safety and efficacy before issuing MA)
1963 - resolution WHA 16.36 reaffirmed the need for early
action in regard to adverse drug reactions
1964 - UK started “yellow cards” system
1965 - European Union issued EC Directive 65/65
1968 - start of WHO Programme for International Drug
Monitoring
1990 - ICH - elaboration of intra-regional requirements for
safety starts
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Drug Safety: some definitions (1)
Adverse event/adverse experience - Any untoward
medical occurrence that may present during treatment
with a pharmaceutical product but which does not
necessarily have a causal relationship with this treatment
Side effect - Any unintended effect of a pharmaceutical
product occurring at doses normally used in man, which is
related to the pharmacological proprieties of the drug
Essential elements of this definition are the pharmacological
nature of the effect, that the phenomenon is unintended, and
that there is no overt overdose
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Drug Safety: some definitions (2)
Adverse reaction - A response to a drug which is noxious
and unintended, and which occurs at doses normally used
in man for the prophylaxis, diagnosis, or therapy of
disease, or for modification of physiological function
(WHO Technical Report No 498, 1972, ICH definition
regarding marketed products practically the same)
Pharmacovigilance is a science and activities relating to
the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention
of adverse effects or any other possible drug-related
problems.
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Drug Safety: some definitions (3)
Signal - Reported information on a possible causal
relationship between an adverse event and a drug, the
relationship being unknown or incompletely documented
previously.
Usually more than a single report is required to generate a
signal, depending upon the seriousness of the event and
the quality of the information
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How do we get information on drug safety?
Main sources of information:
Pre-clinical studies
Clinical studies
pre- and post-marketing
Spontaneous adverse reaction reporting*
national and international
Epidemiological studies
case-control
cohort
Data collected for other purposes
routine statistics
databases of prescription and outcomes
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Limitations of Pre-approval Clinical Trials
Size (maximum 3,000-5,000 subjects)
Sometimes larger for vaccine
Narrow Population
Often does not include special groups
(e.g., children, elderly)
Narrow indications not covering actual evolving uses
in practice
Short Duration (1-3 years)
Latent effects not directly measured
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The Likelihood of Observing an Adverse Drug
Reaction Employing Numbers Usually Studied in
Premarketing Trials
Number of Patients
2,000
Threshold for ADR
Probability
1 / 500
(Lymphoma From Azathioprine)
0.98
1 / 1,000
(Eye Damage From Practolol)
0.86
1 / 10,000
(Anaphylaxis From Penicillin)
0.18
1 / 50,000
(Aplastic Anemia From Chloramphenicol)
0.04
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How many patients one needs to treat to see
with high probability the reaction?
Pre-marketing studies are carried out in limited number
of patients: “The law of three”
In order to detect for sure SAE that occurs as 1 event per
2000 patients treated we need to treat
6000 patients
for 1 case
9600 patients
for 2 cases
13 000 patients
for 3 cases
The number of patients involved in pre-marketing studies has
been increasing but is still limited in comparison with the exposure
to the drug in post-marketing phase
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Are drugs safer today ? (1)
During 1960-1999 there were 121 safety related
withdrawals Worldwide
Market life was known for 87 of those
Market life less than 2 years 31%
Market life less than 5 years 50%
Fung et al. Drug Information Journal, 2001; 35:293-317
During 1972-1994 in 583 new active substances were
approved
Of these 59 were withdrawn later
During 1990-2001 in UK 24 drugs were withdrawn due
to safety reasons
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Are drugs safer today? (2)
In England and Wales the number of deaths related to
ADRs has raised during last 10 years
Study of 3,277 Coroner’s Inquests in one UK district
showed during 1986-1991 10 deaths due to prescribing
errors and 36 due to ADRs
These 46 deaths made approximately 1 in 2000
A meta-analysis of 39 prospective studies in USA
ADRs between fourth and sixth leading cause of death in
USA; fatality rate as a result of ADRs was estimated 0.32%
among hospitalised patients
The annual cost of ADR related hospital costs 1.6-4 billion
US $
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Ferner et al. J R Soc Med, 1994;87:145-148
Lazarou et al. JAMA, 1998;279:1200-1205
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The cost of adverse drug events: estimated lost
patient activity days per year in hospitalised
patients
Country
Serious ADRs
Lost Activity Days
US
Germany
UK
Australia
Sweden
700,000
206,000
148,000
48,000
22,000
1,218,000
358,440
257,520
83,520
38,280
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WHO Collaborating Centre called Uppsala
Monitoring Centre (UMC): operational arm of
WHO Drug Monitoring Programme
Established in 1978 as Swedish Foundation
Based on agreement between Swedish Government and
World Health Organization
Originally financial contributions from Sweden, selffinancing today
Formerly Swedish administrative board, international
board today (3 of 6 members nominated by WHO)
WHO headquarters responsible for policy
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From pilot to permanence: Countries
participating in the WHO Programme 2002
Member countries
Associate member countries
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(68)
(7)
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Uppsala Monitoring Centre (UMC): major
resource for WHO pharmacovigilance related
activities
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Major areas of work - cooperation and support to
national centres
Collection and processing of case reports of ADRs
Data utilization (3 million reports in database)
Information exchange and feedback
Education, training and advise
Harmonization
Research and evaluation
Main function
Signal generation (identification of previously
unknown adverse drug reactions) and
communication
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Uppsala Monitoring Centre (UMC): major
recent achievements
New innovative tools
A sophisticated Bayesian confidence propagation
neural network (BCPNN) programme (1998), which
partly automates the signal detection, provides
earlier signals
But effectiveness depends on
Size of database
Quality of reports
Timeliness of reporting
Active and reliable reporting culture
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Recent trends: enlarging the scope of
pharmacovigilance
Pharmacovigilance concerns have been widened to
include:
herbal medicines
traditional and complementary medicines
blood products
biologicals
vaccines
medical devices
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World Health Assembly resolution 54.11, 21 May
2001: WHO Medicines Strategy
… bearing in mind the previous report on the subject, that highlight challenges
related to the international trade agreements, access to essential drugs,
drug quality and rational use of medicines, together with the urgent need
to improve access to treating priority health problems such as malaria,
childhood illnesses, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, among others;
REQUESTS Director-General: …
(3) to provide support for implementation of drug monitoring systems in
order better to identify developing resistance, adverse reactions and
misuse of drugs within health systems, thus promoting rational use of
drugs;
(6) to provide support to Member States to set up efficient national
regulatory mechanisms for quality assurance that will help ensure
compliance with good manufacturing practices, bioavailability and
bioequivalence
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World Health Assembly resolution, May 2002:
Quality of Care: Patient Safety
… Concerned that the incidence of adverse events is a challenge to quality of
care, a significant avoidable cause of human suffering, and high toll in
financial loss and opportunity cost to health services;
Noting that significant enhancement of health systems’ performance can be
achieved … by preventing adverse events in particular, and improving patient
safety and health care quality in general;
REQUESTS Director-General: …
(1) to develop global norms, standards and guidelines for the definition,
measurement and reporting of adverse events..., and to provide support to
countries in developing reporting systems, taking preventive action … ;
(2) to promote framing of evidence-based policies, including global standards
that will improve patient care, with particular emphasis on such aspects as
product safety, safe clinical practice … and safe use of medicinal products
and medical devices, and creation of a culture of safety within health care
organizations.
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What is WHO doing to follow the recommendations by
the World Health Assembly? Publications published and
under preparation.
- Safety Monitoring of Medicinal Products - Guidelines for
Setting Up and Running a Pharmacovigilance Centre (2000)
- The Importance of Pharmacovigilance (2002)
- Safety of Medicines - A Guide to Detecting and Reporting of
Adverse Drug Reactions. Why Health Professionals Need to
Take Action (2002) http://www.who.int/medicines/library/qsm/who-edm-qsm2002-2/esd_safety.pdf
- Safety Monitoring of Medicinal Products in Communities (first
draft)
- Safety Monitoring of Herbal Medicines (process started)
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A Future challenges: safety of drugs for
neglected diseases (1)
Research and developemnt for neglected diseases
intensifying
Problems with regulatory assessment - who does it?
Launch in places where no monitoring, no health
systems, no health care professionals
All drugs immediately OTC
No incentive for post-marketing studies
No ...
More responsibility and care needed that in case of
launching in developed markets!
Regulatory guidance/requirements missing
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How to ensure drug safety in communities affected by
neglected diseases?
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A Future challenges: improvement of existing
systems (3)
Are existing systems exhausted?
Likely improvement of spontaneous reporting by
medical doctors can enable more early signal detection
Can patients and pharmacists reporting improve
patients safety?
Initiatives of creating data bases of patient reports
Pharmacists based reporting
Regulatory guidance in which cases new/alternative
methods have to be imposed
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A Future challenges: improvement of
information, education and communication (4)
Improvement of information
In many parts of the World information is either not
readily available or of poor quality
In some countries still only OTC drugs have PIL although both
POM and OTC are delivered without prescription
Education
Can education of consumers/patients improve drug
safety?
Communication
Health professionals
Patients
Media
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