Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety

Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety for the UK and Europe.

What Is A Pharmacovigilance Safety Database?

A safety database is both a core element of any pharmacovigilance system and a legal pre-requisite for pharmaceutical companies wishing to place a medicine or medicinal product onto any EU/EEA market [1]. To enter those markets, each product must first be granted a Marketing Authorisation (MA) by the regulatory authorities [1]. The safety database must already be in place and described within the Detailed Description of Pharmacovigilance System (DDPS) accompanying the MA application [1]. This article explains key functions of safety databases, to create a better understanding of their overall purpose.

Why have a Safety Database?

Safety databases should allow pharmaceutical companies to rapidly gather relevant information about the medicine or medicinal products in question. There will be information which needs to be supplied to regulatory authorities via statutory electronic reporting and the database must support this. The database must therefore be validated and acceptable to those regulatory authorities. In essence, the database must be entirely suitable to the task, in compliance with Part III of the relevant legislation, Volume 9A of The Rules Governing Medicinal Products in the European Union – Guidelines on Pharmacovigilance for Medicinal Products for Human Use [1]. Details of the database are assessed during the application stage for each MA, as they will form part of the DDPS [2]. To paint perhaps a more rapidly accessible picture here, the safety database is the tool used to help staff collate and analyse key drug safety data. One example could be any Adverse or Suspected Adverse Event Reports for one particular product. The database will be electronic but not ‘autonomous’: it will not perform tasks without key interaction by highly skilled staff, no matter which process is underway.

Signal Detection

A compliant, suitable Safety Database is able to process data related to signal detection. Signal detection essentially uses data to detect any new patterns or findings. These can be identified by analysing data tables according to principles of statistical disproportion. Upon detection the subsequent course will be variable but can involve action by the regulatory authorities.

Periodic Safety Update Reports Production (PSURs)

Any medicine or medicinal product granted an (EU) MA is legally required to become the subject of post-marketing Periodic Safety Update Reporting. PSURs are always more than an in-house assessment. Presented directly to regulatory authorities, as you might expect whenever drug safety is concerned, they will of course be subjected to an extremely thorough inspection of their contents. A comprehensive database will be able to process the required data in a manner which facilitates the production of PSURs in the appropriate format as far as those authorities are concerned. For example, modern databases integrate regionally-tailored support on regulations.

Statutory Electronic Reporting

Certain safety databases are able to incorporate functionality to file expedited and aggregate reports to regional regulatory authorities. Again, this would always take place with core staff input, rather than becoming any type of scenario where a computer simply somehow ‘spits out’ a report. Electronic reporting will be required within strict time deadlines and differing formats by differing authorities throughout the world. In the EU for example, expedited reporting is obligatory within 15 days of a spontaneous adverse drug reaction case report.

These are just some of the core functions of a suitable safety database, which make it easy to see why it’s one of the pillars of good quality drug safety monitoring. It may be web-based, but whatever the platform it will be electronic. It is not however necessary for pharmaceutical companies to purchase and install a dedicated ‘in-house’ safety database. Instead it is common to find them using commercially available fully compliant products introduced by external pharmacovigilance services firms, who simply provide them with the necessary ongoing support.

References:

  1. EMEA. Volume 9A of The Rules Governing Medicinal Products in the European Union – Guidelines on Pharmacovigilance for Medicinal Products for Human Use. 2011. [ONLINE] Available at: http://ec.europa.eu/health/files/eudralex/vol-9/pdf/vol9a_09-2008_en.pdf. [Accessed 22 January 2011].
  1. EMEA. Volume 9A of The Rules Governing Medicinal Products in the European Union – Guidelines on Pharmacovigilance for Medicinal Products for Human Use. 2011. Article 2.2.3 d [ONLINE] Available at: http://ec.europa.eu/health/files/eudralex/vol-9/pdf/vol9a_09-2008_en.pdf. [Accessed 22 January 2011].

Pharmacovigilance spontaneous reporting

Spontaneous reporting

This is the reporting by healthcare professionals (and in some countries, patients, relatives and others) “spontaneously” of their suspicion of an adverse reaction having occurred. The reporting might be directly to the company marketing the product, or it could be made to the regulatory authority. If there has been spontaneous reporting of a suspected ADR to a pharmaceutical company (including reporting to any employee, such as sales representatives or to contractors) there are legal obligations on the company to report serious reactions within a specified time frame to the regulatory authority (“expedited reporting). This takes place to the authorities in that country where the report was received and possibly to other regulatory authorities also. For non-serious reactions, reports usually have to be included in periodic safety update reports (see below).

In addition, the pharmaceutical company has to identify reports of adverse reactions published in the medical and scientific literature (by a process of weekly “literature screening”) and cases must be reported by the company in a similar way to the regulatory authorities.

The authorities in turn are required to report to each company anonymised information on the serious adverse reactions that they have received in relation to that company’s marketed products. There are also requirements for companies to report spontaneous cases of serious adverse reactions that they have received from certain regulatory authorities to their own authorities. There are mechanisms in place to identify and remove duplicate reports.

All these cases – ‘Individual Case Safety Reports’ (ICSRs) – are entered on the company’s safety database and on the regulatory authority’s safety database. They are examined individually and in the aggregate for a product in order to identify clusters of reports that could represent a signal of a previously unknown adverse reaction or drug interaction or some change in the character of a known adverse reaction. It may also be possible to recognise a new risk factor for a reaction to a product, such as a sub-group of patients at particular risk.

The main limitation of spontaneous reporting schemes is that there is under-reporting of adverse reactions, as in most countries the process for the initial reporter (i.e. the healthcare professional) is voluntary and unpaid. However, their main purpose is not the quantification of the frequency of adverse reactions, but the identification of signals.

In addition to the national regulatory agency databases of spontaneous reports and the company databases, there are two over-arching international databases. The EMEA maintains the EUDRAVIGILANCE safety database, including ICSRs received from all companies with products marketed in the European Economic Area, reports received by the national regulatory agencies in the EEA, and serious cases from clinical trials. This database is linked electronically to the national regulatory agency databases and exchanges data with them and with the company databases electronically.

In addition, the World Health Organization operates a global scheme involving national collaborating centres (most of the national regulatory agencies worldwide) and a coordinating centre in Sweden – the Uppsala Monitoring Centre (UMC). The regulatory authorities send the UMC all serious adverse reaction reports that they have received. The UMC database (“Vigibase”) is the only database in the world that includes all the regulatory authority and company ADR reports. The UMC has a panel of independent experts who review the data for signals of new adverse reactions. Aggregate data from Vigibase are made available to pharmaceutical companies for purchase.

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