Technical Briefing Seminar 22
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Transcript Technical Briefing Seminar 22
The need for
Pharmacovigilance
Mary R Couper and Shanthi Pal
Quality Assurance and Safety of Medicines
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Medicine Safety
To undergo treatment you
have to be very healthy,
because apart from your
sickness you have to
withstand the medicine.
Molière
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Risk
No medicinal product is entirely or
absolutely safe for all people, in all
places, at all times. We must always
live with some measure of uncertainty.
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
What is Pharmacovigilance?
WHO definition:
The science and activities relating to the
detection, assessment, understanding and
prevention of adverse effects or any other
drug-related problem.
This applies throughout the life cycle of a medicine equally to
the pre-approval stage as to the post-approval.
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Pharmaco - Vigilance
Pharmaco = medicine
Vigilare = to watch
– alert watchfulness
– forbearance of sleep; wakefulness
– watchfulness in respect of danger; care; caution;
circumspection
– the process of paying close and continuous attention
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
What is the scope of pharmacovigilance?
improve patient care and safety in relation to the use of medicines,
and all medical and paramedical interventions,
improve public health and safety in relation to the use of medicines,
contribute to the assessment of benefit, harm, effectiveness and risk
of medicines, encouraging their safe, rational and more effective
(including cost-effective) use, and
promote understanding, education and clinical training in
pharmacovigilance and its effective communication to the public
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Adverse event/experience
– WHO definition
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
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Adverse Reaction to a medicine (ADR)
–WHO Definition
A reaction which is noxious and unintended,
and which occurs at doses normally used in
man for the prophylaxis, diagnosis or therapy
of disease, or for the modification of
physiological function
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Why do we need pharmacovigilance?
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
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1959 / 61– Epidemia de focomelia por Talidomida (4.000 – 10.000 casos no
mundo, com 15% de mortos)
Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Why do we need pharmacovigilance?
Reason 1:
Humanitarian concern –
– Insufficient evidence of safety from clinical trials
– Animal experiments
– Phase 1 – 3 studies prior to marketing authorization
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Drug Development
Clinical development of medicines
Phase I
20 – 50 healthy volunteers
to gather preliminary data
250 – 4000 more varied
patient groups – to
determine short-term safety
and efficacy
Phase II
Phase IV
150 – 350 subjects with
disease - to determine
safety and dosage
recommendations
Post-approval studies to
determine specific safety issues
Phase I
Phase II
Development
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Phase III
Regi
Preclinical
Animal
Experiments
strat
ion
Animal experiments for
acute toxicity, organ
damage, dose dependence,
metabolism, kinetics,
carcinogenicity,
mutagenicity/teratogenicity
Phase III
Phase IV
Spontaneous
Post-approval
Reporting
Post Registration
Limitations of phase 1 -3 clinical trials
limited size: no more than 5000 and often as little
as 500 volunteers
narrow population: age and sex specific
narrow indications: only the specific disease
studied
short duration: often no longer than a few weeks
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Examples of product recalls due to toxicity
Examples of serious and unexpected
adverse events leading to withdrawal
of medicine
Medicine
Year
Thalidomide
1965
Phocomelia
Practolol
1975
Sclerosing peritonitis
Clioquinol
1970
Subacute nephropathy
Benoxaprofen
1982
Nephrotoxicity, cholestatic jaundice
Terfenadine
1997
Torsade de pointes
Rofecoxib
2004
Cardiovascular effects
Veralipride
2007
Anxiety, depression, movement
disorders
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Why do we need pharmacovigilance?
Reason 2
• Medicines are supposed to save lives
Dying from a disease is sometimes unavoidable; dying
from a medicine is unacceptable. Lepakhin V. Geneva
2005
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
UK:
It has been suggested that ADRs may cause 5700 deaths per
year in UK.
Pirmohamed et al, 2004
US:
ADRs were 4th-6th commonest cause of death in the US in 1994
Lazarou et al, 1998
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
125 Patients
24 Patients experienced ADRs (19%)
(59%) were avoidable
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Why do we need pharmacovigilance?
Reason 3: ADRs are expensive !!
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
6.5% of admissions are due to ADRs
Seven 800-bed hospitals are occupied by ADR
patients
Cost £446 million per annum
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Cost of ADRs in the US?
Cost of drug related morbidity and mortality exceeded
$177.4 billion in 2000 (Ernst FR & Grizzle AJ, 2001: J
American Pharm. Assoc)
ADR related cost to the country exceeds the cost of the
medications themselves
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Why do we need pharmacovigilance?
Reason 4:
Promoting rational use of
medicines and adherence
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Prescription
Dr A. Who
31 December 2000
Re: Mr Joseph Bloggs
1)
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abacavir + lamivudine + zidovudine 1 BD
2)
atenolol 100 mg/d
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acetylsalicylic acid 150mg/d
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cerivastatin 10 mg/d
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gemfibrozil 200 mg/d
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metformin 500 mg/d
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fluoxetine 50 mg/d
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Sildenafil
Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Italian
Cohort
I
C O
N A
Main reasons of discontinuation
of first HAART regimen within
1st year: ICONA
Naive
Antiretroviral
Toxicity
Failure
Non-adherence
Other
Continued
Monforte et al. AIDS 1999
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Why do we need pharmacovigilance?
Reason 5: Ensuring public confidence
If something can go wrong, it will –
Murphy's law
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
ALLEGATION:
Known about SSRI
prescribing at
unsafe doses for a
decade
Guardian Weekly
March 18-24 2004
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Safety concerns now high on the agenda of ALL
countries
Developed countries
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Developing countries
Need for Pharmacovigilance
Freetown, Sierra Leone 19th Aug.th2008
Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September
2008
PV in Emerging
Countries, CPT2008 29 July 2008
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Why do we need pharmacovigilance?
Reason 6: Ethics
To know of something that is harmful to another person
who does not know, and not telling, is unethical
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Consequence
Not reporting a serious unknown reaction is
unethical
valid for everyone
• patient
• health professional
• manufacturer
• authorities
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008
Pharmacovigilance is Essential
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Technical Briefing Seminar 22- 26 September 2008