detection methods of Adverse drug reactions, postal survey method, Reporting of Adverse drug reactions, Preventability assessment, predictability assessments
2. Definition
Types of ADRs
Detection of ADRs
Severity Assessment
Seriousness and Predictability Assessment
Reporting of ADRs
Reference
3. According to WHO Adverse drug reaction is defined as ”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
modifications of physiological function.” Excludes overdose(either
accidental or intentional), drug abuse, treatment failure and drug
administration errors.
Adverse event is defined as ” Any medical occurrence temporally associated
with the use of a medicinal product, but not necessarily causally related ”
6. During the development of new medicines, their safety is tested in animal
models.
Specific animal studies for carcinogenicity, teratogenicity and mutagenicity are
also available.
Clinical trials are carried out in 3 different phases prior to the submission of a
marketing authorization application.
Clinical trials normally identifies ADRsof frequency greater that 0.5-1.0%.
7. Pharmavigilance methodologies are used for detection of risk and for the
collection of risk information.
Powerful and cost effective system for the identification of unknown
drug-related risk is spontaneous adverse drug reactions reporting.
Health care practitioner should see it as a part of professional duty report
ADR result in a patient under his care.
Concerned identifying product defect, intoxicants and abuse and unexpected
lack of therapeutic effect.
8. Two epidemiological methods are most commonly used are :
1. Cohort studies
2. Case-Control studies
1. Cohort studies: Patient exposed to a particular drug are followed up
actively and systematically and ADR frequencies are compared to an
unexposed control population.
Cont..
2. Case-Control studies
Individuals affected by the adverse event being studied are identified . Each
case is matched with several disease – free control patients randomly
recruited from the study base.
Both cases and controls are investigated their exposure to possible
causative agents prior to occurrence of the event.
The odd ratio calculated on the basis of exposure data.
9. Causality assessment is a method by which the extent of relationship
between a drug and a suspected reaction is established.
If an ADR is suspected, the assessment starts with the collection of all the
relevant data pertaining to patients demographics; medications including
OTCs; time of onset and duration of reaction; treatment of reaction and it's
outcome and reports.
In assessing causality, any of the following approaches may be appropriate:
- opinion of individual experts
- opinion of penal of experts
- formal algorithms
10. Using formal algorithms, collected data are subjected and assessed by
using one or more standard algorithms.
Formal Algorithms
Cont..
Naranjo’s algorithm
Kartch Lasagna’s algorithm
WHO probability Scale
Spanish quantitative imputation scale
Kramer’s scale
Jones scale
European ABO system
Bayesian System
13. Knowledge about rational and safe use of medicines needs to be
provided,
1. During basic training of health professionals
2. Through continuous education programmes to health professionals.
3. By specially designated drug information centers.
4. Through packaged inserts and patient counseling
14. This consists of a specific drug related questionnaire.
This method is primarily used for ADR monitoring of new drugs.
1-2 years after the drug is launched.
The questionnaire asks for details of drug, usage, dose, brand
used, number of patients treated in a given period.
Common ADRs seen with the drug as mentioned in the literature
are listed at the end of questionnaire.
The questionnaire along with a prepaid envelope is then
mailed to practitioners all over the city/state who are likely to
use the drug.
15. Severity describes the extent to which the ADRs influence the
everyday life of a patients.
Karch and Lasagna classify severity into minor, moderate, severe
and lethal.
1. Mild(Minor)
2. Moderate
3. Severe
4. lethal
16. Severity Description Example
Mild No antidote or treatment is required;
hospitalization is not prolonged
Some Antihistamines(some)
Drowsiness
Opioids; constipation
Moderate A change in the treatment (e.g. modified
dosage, addition of a drug), but no
necessarily discontinuation if drug is
required; hospitalization may be
prolonged, or specific treatment may be
required
Hormonal contraceptives: Venous
thrombosis
NSAIDs: Hypertension and edema
Severe ADR may be life threatening and requires
immediate discontinuation of drug and
specific treatment for ADR
ACE inhibitors: Angioedema
Phenothiazines: Abnormal heart
rhythm
Lethal Contributes to patient’s death Acetaminophen over dosage: Liver
failure
Anticoagulants: hemorrhage
17. Hartwig et al categorized ADRs into seven levels as per their
severity.
Level 1 & 2 fall under mild category, level 3 & 4 under moderate
and level 5, 6 & 7 fall under severe category.
18. Mild = Levels 1 and 2; moderate = Levels 3 and 4; severe = Levels 5, 6 and 7.
Level 1 An ADR occurred but required no change in treatment with the suspected drug
Level 2 The ADR required that treatment with the suspected drug be held, discontinued, or otherwise
changed. No antidote or other treatment requirement was required. No increase in length of stay
(LOS)
Level 3 The ADR required that treatment with the suspected drug be held, discontinued, or otherwise
changed. AND/OR An Antidote or other treatment was required. No increase in LOS
Level 4 Any Level 3 ADR which increases length of stay by at least 1 day. OR The ADR was the reason for
the admission
Level 5 Any Level 4 ADR which requires intensive medical care
Level 6 The adverse reaction caused permanent harm to the patient
Level 7 The adverse reaction either directly or indirectly led to the death of the patient
19. Seriousness of an ADR is related to its life threatening nature and is
defined as any untoward reaction to the medicinal product that may
result in death and requires patient hospitalization.
Seriousness of reaction is categorized according to FDA criteria on the
basis of their life threatening nature.
Death
Life-threatening
Hospitalization (initial or prolonged)
Disability or Permanent Damage
Congenital Anomaly/Birth Defect
Required Intervention to Prevent Permanent Impairment or Damage (Devices)
20. According to WHO factsheet, it is estimated that at least 60% of
ADRs are preventable. In some countries ADR-related costs, such
as hospitalization, surgery and lost productivity, exceed the cost of
the medications.
Historically, studies have shown that between 20% and 80% of
ADEs and ADRs are preventable with the majority of latter studies
showing around 60- 70% preventability.
Preventability of ADRs is assessed by using Schumock and
Thornton scale.
21. Definitely Preventable
1. Was there a history of allergy or previous reactions to the drug?
2. Was the drug involved inappropriate for the patient’s clinical condition?
3. Was the dose, route or frequency of administration inappropriate for the patient’s age, weight or disease state?
4. Was a toxic serum drug concentration (or laboratory monitoring test) documented?
5. Was there a known treatment for the Adverse Drug Reaction?
Probably Preventable
6. Was required Therapeutic drug monitoring or other necessary laboratory tests not performed?
7. Was a drug interaction involved in the ADR?
8. Was poor compliance involved in the ADR?
9. Were preventative measures not prescribed or administered to the patient?
Not preventable
If all above criteria not fulfilled
22. Type A(Predictable)
Extension of pharmacologic effect
Often predictable and dose dependent
Responsible foe at least 30% od ADRS
E.g. anticholinergics and dry mouth
Type B(unpredictable)
Idiosyncratic or immunologic reactions
Rare and unpredictable
E.g. chloramphenicol and aplastic anemia, penicillin induced
anaphylactic shock
23. WHAT TO REPORT
All types of suspected ADRs- irrespective of whether they are known or unknown,
serious or non-serious, frequent or rare and regardless of a established causal
relationship.
WHO SHOULD REPORT
All health care and non-health care professionals, hospitals, health centres,
consumers, Pharmaceutical companies.
24. HOW AND WHOM TO REPORT
Use the “Adverse drug reaction reporting form” which is available on official site of IPC
as well as CDSCO.
Helpline Number : 1800-180-3024
E-mail : pvpi.ipcindia@gmail.com
25.
26.
27. 1. Parthasarathy G, Hansen k Nyfort, Nahata CM; A textbook of
Clinical Pharmacy Practice; pp 89-97
2. Schumock GT and Thornton JP. Focusing on the Preventability of
Adverse Drug Reactions. Hosp. Pharm. 1992;27:538.
3. Uppsala Monitoring Centre. Hospital based pharmacovigilance: a
clinical pharmacist’s perspective. Uppsala reports. 2002;20:10–11.
4. G Petrova, A Stoimenova, M Dimitrova. Assessment of the
expectancy, seriousness and severity of adverse drug reactions
reported for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease therapy. SAGE
Open Medicine; Volume 5: 1–8
5. Gogtay NJ, Mangalvedhekar SS, Kshirsagar NA; Adverse Drug
Reaction (ADR) Monitoring in India and the Postal Survey as a
Useful Tool for ADR Detection; Pharmacoepidemiology and drug
safety 2000; 8:235-236