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Charles University in Prague, Third Faculty of Medicine Cycle II, Subject: General Pharmacology Lecture: 12th December 2012 8:00-9:30 Burian Hall, Ruská 87, Prague ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS PHARMACOVIGILANCE Prof. M. Kršiak Department of Pharmacology, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague Teaching Unit No. 21: Adverse drug reactions http://vyuka.lf3.cuni.cz/ Risk - benefit evaluation Benefit/Risk ratio Exposure to personal risk is recognized as a normal aspect of everyday life. We accept a certain level of risk in our lives as necessary to achieve certain benefits. Adverse drug reaction (ADR) = any harmful effect caused by administration of a drug at a normal dosage during normal use Types of Adverse Drug Reactions (A-B-C-D-E): Type A: Augmented pharmacologic effects - dose dependent and predictable (e.g. hypoglycaemia with insulin, bleeding after anticoagulants, drowsiness after opioids) They are common but often not severe, they are usually caused by too high dosage or alered pharmacokinetics (genetic factors, age, reduced renal or hepatal elimination) most often with drugs that have a steep dose-response curve and/or a low therapeutic index Type B: Bizarre effects (or idiosyncratic) - dose independent and unpredictable are relatively rare and may occur with very low doses (e.g. drug allergy – skin rashes – anaphylaxis, blood dyscrasias) Types of Adverse Drug Reactions (A-B-C-D-E): Type C: Chronic effects after chronic administration (e.g. analgesic nephropathy after some analgesics or tardive dyskinesia after antipsychotics) Type D: Delayed effects (e.g. teratogenic effects – thalidomide , cancerogenic effects – stilbestrol during pregnancy > vaginal carcinoma in daughters 20+years later) Type E: End-of-treatment effects (e.g. withdrawal effects opioids, antiepileptics, anxiolytics, rebound phenomenonhypnotics) Examples of adverse effects associated with specific medications Bleeding in GIT NSAIDs Thrombosis hormonal contraceptives Ototoxicity, nephrotoxicity Parkinsonism aminoglycoside antibiotics Aplastic anaemia chloramphenicol Agranulocytosis clozapine (atypical antipsychotic) Hair loss anticancer drugs 1st generation (typical) antipsychotics Pharmacovigilance collecting, monitoring, researching, assessing and evaluating information from healthcare providers and patients on the adverse effects of drugs Major goal of pharmacovigilance is to detect a signal on an unknown serious adverse drug reaction as soon as possible Limits of detecting rare ADRs before drug registration/marketing Pharmaceutical companies are required by law in all countries to report ADRs during clinical trials, testing new drugs on people before they are made generally available. Because these pre-registration clinical trials involve only several thousand patients at most, less-common ADRs are often unknown when a drug enters the market. Pharmacovigilance after drug registration/marketing Postmarketing surveillance Major sources of information on ADRs: 1. Spontaneous reporting of suspected ADRs by healthcare professionals 2. Reporting of ADRs by pharmaceutical companies (marketing authorisation holders) 3. ADRs reported in medical journals Spontaneous reporting Spontaneous reporting of suspected ADRs by healthcare professionals to their national pharmacovigilance center (or to the manufacturer) is indispensable in data-generating system of pharmacovigilance Spontaneous reporting of ADRs by physicians is legally obligatory in many countries Origin of spontaneous reporting of ADRs by physicians: Yellow Card Scheme founded in the UK in 1964 – forms to fill in, sent by post or electronically to the UK pharmacoviligance center The sort of ADRs that should be reported are: Yellow Card Scheme • ADRs that have caused death or a serious illness • Any ADR, however minor, if associated with a new medicine or one that is under continued monitoring (highlighted in the British National Formulary (BNF) with a ▼ black triangle) • Any ADR, however minor, if associated with a child (under 18 years of age) or in pregnancy The sort of ADRs that should be reported are: The American Food and Drug Administration : • Death • Life-threatening • Hospitalization (initial or prolonged) • Disability - significant, persistent, or permanent change, impairment, damage or disruption in the patient's body function/structure, physical activities or quality of life. • Congenital anomaly • Requires intervention to prevent permanent impairment or damage Pharmaceutical companies* continually monitor and assess ADRs in their medicines and are expected to report of them to authorisation agencies and/or to certain pharmacovigilance centers * marketing authorisation holders Periodic Safety Update Reports (PSURs) PSUR is an update report, at defined time points after authorisation, of the worldwide safety experience of a medicinal product. The PSUR is to be submitted to the authorisation agency (e.g. to the European Medicines Agency) by a marketing authorisation holder. PSUR provides succinct summary information together with a critical evaluation of the benefit/risk balance of the product in the light of new or changing post-authorisation information. This evaluation should ascertain whether further investigations need to be carried out and whether changes should be made to the marketing authorisation (e.g. to the product information). International collaboration in the field of pharmacovigilance: WHO International Drug Monitoring Programm Spontaneous reports of suspected ADRs are sent from national pharmacovigilance centers (n ≈100) to the Uppsala Monitoring Centre where they are processed, evaluated and entered into the WHO International Database This may lead to the detection of a signal – an alert about a possible hazard communicated to members countries. Pharmacovigilance in EU: European Medicines Agency (EMA) EudraVigilance the system of collecting all suspected serious ADRs Pharmacovigilance in USA: Postmarketing surveillance is overseen by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which operates a system called MedWatch, to which doctors or the general public can voluntarily report adverse reactions to drugs Solid sources of information on ADRs ADRs in general: SPC (/Summary of Product Characteristics: frequency solid Drug Databases e.g. Micromedex, UpToDate, BNF, AISLP etc ADRs recently reported: e.g. Bulletin of European Medicines Agency (EMA): PhVWP monthly report on safety concerns, guidelines and general matters PhVWP = The CHMP Pharmacovigilance Working Party CHMP = Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use Frequency of adverse drug reactions • Very common (>10%) >= 1/10 • Common (frequent) (1-10%) > = 1/100 and < 1/10 • Uncommon (infrequent) (0,1 - 1 %) >= 1/1000 and < 1/100 • Rare (0,001-0,1%) >= 1/10000 and < 1/1000 • Very rare (< 0,001 %) < 1/10000 Example: frequency of ADRs in NicotineTransdermal Patches (from SPC): Psychiatric Very common 1/10 Sleep disorders including abnormal dreams and insomnia Common 1/100; <1/10 Nervousness Nervous system disorders Very Common 1/10 Headache, dizziness Common 1/100;<1/10 Tremor Cardiac Disorders Common 1/100;<1/10: Palpitations Uncommon 1/1000; <1/100 Tachycardia Respiratory, Thoracic and Mediastinal Disorders Common 1/100; <1/10 Dyspnoea, pharyngitis, cough Gastrointestinal Disorders Very Common 1/10 Nausea, vomiting Common 1/100;<1/10 Dyspepsia, abdominal pain upper, diarrhoea , dry mouth, constipation Skin and Subcutaneous Tissue Disorders Common 1/100; <1/10 Sweating increased Very rare <1/10000 Dermatitis allergic, dermatitis contact, photosensitivity Musculoskeletal and Connective Tissue Disorders Common 1/100; <1/10 Arthralgia, myalgia Summary – „a message to take home“: Spontaneous reporting of suspected ADRs by healthcare professionals to their national pharmacovigilance center (or to the manufacturer) is essential in pharmacovigilance