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Pharmacovigilance: FROM

This document discusses pharmacovigilance, which is defined as the science and activities relating to the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention of adverse effects or any other drug-related problem. It covers the introduction, scope, need, and history of pharmacovigilance in various regions including India. Key points discussed include the aims to improve patient safety, partners involved, types of adverse reactions, limitations of clinical trials, examples of drugs withdrawn due to safety issues, costs of adverse drug reactions, and promoting rational drug use.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
686 views46 pages

Pharmacovigilance: FROM

This document discusses pharmacovigilance, which is defined as the science and activities relating to the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention of adverse effects or any other drug-related problem. It covers the introduction, scope, need, and history of pharmacovigilance in various regions including India. Key points discussed include the aims to improve patient safety, partners involved, types of adverse reactions, limitations of clinical trials, examples of drugs withdrawn due to safety issues, costs of adverse drug reactions, and promoting rational drug use.

Uploaded by

meyhal17
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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PHARMACOVIGILANCE

FROM:-
DEEPTI KUMARI
HIMANI ARORA
GEETA BHATT
HIMANI BORA
PALLAVI SHRIVASTAVA
TRIPTI KAUSHIK
EKTA JAIN

1
CONTENTS
Introduction
The scope of pharmacovigilance
Need for pharmacovigilance
WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring
Pharmacovigilance in India
Conclusion
References

2
INTRODUCTION
WHO definition:

The science and activities relating to the


detection, assessment, understanding and
prevention of adverse effects or any other drug-
related problem.
• Recently, its concerns have been widened to include herbals,
traditional and complementary medicines, blood products,
biologicals, medical devices and vaccines" (WHO, 2002).
 This applies throughout the life cycle of a medicine equally to the
pre-approval stage as to the post-approval.

3
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

4
WHAT IS PHARMACOVIGILANCE
(PV)?
The science and activities relating to the detection,
assessment, understanding and prevention of
adverse effects or any other medicine-related problem -
WHO
HISTORY…..
Registration of New Chemical Entities was very much
dependant on the status of products in the reference countries
Changes to product information was mainly industry driven
Few pre-clinical studies conducted in the region and hardly any
Phase IV studies
Adverse drug reaction reporting was very minimal and mainly
involved reports submitted by health care professionals
CONT…….
Most reports were for known reactions involving older drugs
which were used in government-run hospitals
Signal detection not possible as there were too few reports
Only able to detect some quality defects of generics which
manifested as ADRs
Pharmacovigilance was mainly about getting ADR reports and
submitting them to WHO
No significant regulatory changes made based on these reports
CURRENT SCENARIO
Increased awareness and interest amongst doctors and
pharmacists to report ADRS as they have seen some benefit in
reporting
Increasing number of clinical trials being conducted especially
in Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia
GCP training for investigators served to increase awareness of
SAE and ADR reporting amongst health care professionals and
the industry
CONT…..
More hospitals and companies using on-line reporting system –
less hassle than submitting hard copy reports
Increasing involvement by hospital pharmacists in
pharmacovigilance – during clinical ward rounds and when
counseling patients
The Aims of Pharmacovigilance
To improve patient care and safety
To improve public health and safety
To contribute to the assessment of benefit, harm,
effectiveness and risk of medicines
To promote understanding, education and clinical
training
Who are the partners?
Government
Industry
Hospitals and academia
Medical and pharmaceutical associations
Poisons information centres
Health professionals
Patients
Consumers
Media
WHO
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.

12
Adverse Drug 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 the modification of
physiological function."
Adverse Event
 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 properties of the drug.

13
SERIOUS ADRS
 A serious adverse event (experience) or reaction is any untoward
medical occurrence that at any dose:
 results in death,
 is life-threatening,
 requires inpatient hospitalization of prolongation of existing
hospitalization,
 is a congenital anomaly/birth defect.

UNEXPECTED ADVERSE REACTION:


 An adverse reaction, the nature, severity or outcome of which is
not consistent with the summary of product characteristics.

14
Adverse Reactions:Possible Causes
Intrinsic factors of the drug
 Pharmacological
 Idiosyncratic
 Carcinogenicity, Mutagenicity
 Teratogenicity
Extrinsic factors
 Adulterants
 Contamination
Underlying medical conditions
Interactions
Wrong usage
15
Congenital limb defects due to the use of Thalidomide

16
Need for pharmacovigilance

Reason 1:
 Humanitarian concern –
 Insufficient evidence of safety from clinical trials
 Animal experiments
 Phase 1 – 3 studies prior to marketing authorization

17
Registration Criteria
Efficacy
 Evaluated from data obtained from clinical trials
Quality
 Compliance to established standards, manufacture by GMP
licensed premise
Safety **
 Toxicology, clinical trials

** (Very limited information)


(Further established through post registration studies)
(Discovering new dangers of drugs after marketing is common)

18
Drug Development
Clinical development of medicines

Phase I Phase III


20 – 50 healthy volunteers 250 – 4000 more varied
to gather preliminary data patient groups – to
determine short-term safety
and efficacy
Animal experiments for
acute toxicity, organ
damage, dose dependence, Phase II
metabolism, kinetics, Phase IV
carcinogenicity, 150 – 350 subjects with
mutagenicity/teratogenicity Post-approval studies to
disease - to determine
determine specific safety issues
safety and dosage
recommendations

Preclinical
Phase IV Spontaneous
Animal Phase I Phase II Phase III
Experiments Post-approval Reporting

Development Post Registration

Naresh.K, M.Pharm, 1st sem(IP), SPIPS, HNK 19


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

20
ACTIVE INGREDIENTS WITHDRAWN
 THALIDOMIDE (1961) Congenital limb defects
 BENOXAPROFEN (1982) Hepatotoxicity
 PHENFORMIN (1982) Lactic acidosis
 FENFLURAMINE (1997) Heart-valve abnormalities
 ASTEMIZOLE Many drug interactions
 PHENYLPROPANOLAMINE(2000) Haemorragic stroke
 KAVA KAVA Liver abnormalities
 CERIVASTATIN Rhabdomyolysis
 CISAPRIDE Cardiac arrythmias
 ROFECOXIB (2004) Cardiovascular events
 VALDECOXIB (2005) Cardiovascular events,
serious skin reactions
 COMFREY, SENECIO Nephrotoxicity
 TEGASEROD (2007) Cardiovascular events
 CLOBUTINOL (2007) Cardiac arrhythmia

21
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

22
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

23
Reason 3: ADRs are expensive !!

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.

24
Reason 4:
Promoting rational use of medicines and
adherence
Reason 5:
Ensuring public confidence

25
Reason 6:
Ethics
To know of something that is harmful to
another person who does not know, and not
telling, is unethical

27
Partners
Government
Industry
Hospitals and academia
Medical and pharmaceutical associations
Poisons information centres
Health professionals
Patients
Consumers
Media
WHO
28
What should be reported
New drugs
Report all suspected reactions including minor ones
For established or well known drugs
 All serious, unexpected, unusual ADRs
Change in frequency of a given reaction
ADRs to generics not seen with innovator products
ADRs to traditional medicines

29
All suspected drug-drug, drug-food, drug-food
supplement interactions
Statement highlighting marine source of supplements
such as glucosamine so that can be avoided by those
with allergy to sea food
ADRs associated with drug withdrawals
ADRs due to medication errors
eg vincristine given IT
ADRs due to lack of efficacy or suspected
pharmaceutical defects

30
Innovator products
 Limited information available at time when drug is first
marketed.

 Conduct intensive monitoring to identify new, unlabeled


adverse reactions, monitor for “rare” reactions.

 Provide updates to prescribers on new findings, labelling


changes, safety issues.

31
Generic products
 Monitor efficacy

 Monitor adverse effect profile to study differences in ADR


pattern with respect to innovator products

 Help in improving quality of generics used

 Whether the problem arose due to ADR or quality defects

32
WHO Programme for International Drug
Monitoring

Started 1968
Located in Uppsala, Sweden
Collaborating centre for maintaining global ADR
database - Vigibase

33
Roles of WHO Collaborating Centre
Identify early warning signals of serious adverse
reactions to medicines
Evaluate the hazard
Undertake research into the mechanisms of action to
aid the development of safer and more effective
medicines

34
Pharmacovigilance in India
Pharmacovigilance is fastest emerging as an important
approach for the early detection of unwanted effects of
the drugs and to take appropriate regulatory actions if
necessary .
National Pharmacovigilance Centre
CDSCO has initiated a country-wide
Pharmacovigilance programme under the aegis of
DGHS, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare
Government of India.
35
National Pharmacovigilance Programme
The Programme aims to foster the culture of ADR
notification in its first year of operation and
subsequently aims to generate broad based ADR data
on the Indian population.
Sponsored and coordinated by the country’s central
drug regulatory agency – (CDSCO)
 Peripheral Pharmacovigilance Centres
 Regional Pharmacovigilance Centers (RPCs)
 Zonal Pharmacovigilance Centre (ZPCs)

36
37
38
SO….WHAT IS OUR ROLE?
SEND NOT ONLY
QUANTITY BUT….

QUALITY
REPORTS
HOW?
Monitor clinical status of patients
Identify the correct ADRs not side effects
Get more information
Investigate at hospital level
Help doctors to fill-up the forms
Keep patient’s record if more information needed

40
CONCLUSION
Pharmacovigilance looks at all available information to
assess the safety profile of a drug.
Pharmacovigilance should also take the benefit of the
drug in account.
Pharmacovigilance required for systematically
identifying and correlating drugs and side-effects and
taking corrective actions, especially for the product
launching first time in India.

41
A wise man can see as much as he ought; not as much
as he can.

Michel de Montaigne (1533-92) french phelosopher

42
Pharmacovigilance is Essential

43
REFERENCES
1. The need for Pharmacovigilance, WHO,technical brieflig seminar,
sept, 2008.
WHO Pharmacovigilance:ensuring the safe use of medicines. WHO
policy perspective on medicines.Geneva:WHO;2004
2. The Importance of Pharmacovigilance, World Health Organization
2002
3. World Health Organization Technical Report No, 498 (1972)
4.H.P.Rang,M.M.Dale,J.M.Ritter,P.K.Moore,“Pharmacology”,CURCHILL
LIVINGSTONE, 5th edition,5
5. National Pharmacovigilance Protocol, Ministry of Health and Family
Welfare, Govt. of India

44
6. Ronald D. Mann Elizabeth B. Andrews
“Pharmacovigilance” WILEY, 3
7. www.pharmainfo.com
8. www.pharmabiz.com

45
Naresh.K, M.Pharm, 1st sem(IP), SPIPS, HNK 46

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