Ebook For PV Interview Preparation
Ebook For PV Interview Preparation
Ebook For PV Interview Preparation
INTERVIEW
FREQUENTLY ASKED
QUESTIONS &
ANSWERS
Hello Readers,
The purpose of this eBook is to
help freshers and experienced PV
professionals in their interview
preparaton.
PV Abbreviations......................page 04
PV Basics and ICSR..................page 10
Special situation scenarios.....page 32
MedDRA......................................page 40
Aggregate reporting.................page 44
Signal Management.................page 58
Risk Management.....................page 66
EudraVigilance..........................page 77
Labelling......................................page 80
PSMF............................................page 86
Vaccine pharmacovigilance...page 90
PV Agreements..........................page 94
Pharmacovigilance
Abbreviations
ADR: Adverse Drug Reaction
AE: Adverse Event
AEFI: Adverse event following
immunization
AESI: Adverse event of special interest
aRMM: Additional risk minimisation
measure
ATMP: Advanced therapy medicinal
product
CCDS: Company core data sheet
CCSI: Company core safety information
CHMP: Committee for Medicinal
Products for Human Use
CIOMS: Council for International
Organizations of Medical Sciences
CMDh: Coordination Group for Mutual
Recognition and Decentralised
Procedures – Human
DDPS: Detailed description of the
pharmacovigilance system
DEC: Drug Event Combination
DHPC: Direct healthcare professional
communication
DIBD: Development international birth
date
DLP: Data lock point
DME: Designated Medical Event
DSUR: Development Safety Update
Report
eCTD: Electronic common technical
document
eRMR: Electronic Reaction Monitoring
Report
EEA: European Economic Area
EMA: European Medicines Agency
EPAR: European public assessment
report
EPITT: European Pharmacovigilance
Issues Tracking Tool
eRMR: Electronic reaction monitoring
report
EU: European Union
EudraCT: European Clinical Trials
Database
EuRD: EU reference date
EV: EudraVigilance
EVCTM: EudraVigilance Clinical Trial
Module
EVDAS: EudraVigilance Data Analysis
System
EV EWG: EudraVigilance Expert Working
Group
EVMPD: EudraVigilance Medicinal Product
Dictionary
EVPM: EudraVigilance Post-Authorisation
Module
EVWEB: EudraVigilance Web application
FAERS: FDA Adverse Event Reporting
System
GCP: Good clinical practice
GVP: Good pharmacovigilance practices
HLGT: Higher level group term
HLT: High-level term
IBD: International Birth Date
ICH: The International Conference on
Harmonization of Technical Requirements
for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for
Human Use
ICSR: Individual Case Safety Report
IME: Important medical event
INN: International non-proprietary name
MA: Marketing authorisation
MAH: Marketing authorisation holder
ME: Medication error
MedDRA: Medical Dictionary for Regulatory
Activities
MLM: Medical Literature Monitoring
NCA: National competent authority
PAES: Post-authorisation efficacy study
PASS: Post-authorisation safety study
PBRER: Periodic benefit-risk evaluation
report
PhV: Pharmacovigilance
PL: Package leaflet
PPP: Pregnancy prevention programme
PRAC: Pharmacovigilance and Risk
Assessment Committee
PRR: Proportional reporting ratio
PSMF: Pharmacovigilance system master
file
PSUR: Periodic safety update report
PT: Preferred term
QPPV: Qualified Person responsible for
Pharmacovigilance
RCT: Randomised clinical trial
RMM: Risk minimisation measure
RMP: Risk management plan
ROR: Reporting Odds Ratio
SAE: Serious Adverse Event
SAR: Serious Adverse Reaction
SDR: Signal of disproportionate reporting
SmPC: Summary of product characteristics
SMQ: Standardised MedDRA query
SOC: System organ class
SUSAR: Suspected Unexpected Serious
Adverse Reaction
USFDA: United States Food & Drug
Administration
WHO: World Health Organization
WHO DD: WHO Drug Dictionary
xEVMPD: eXtended EudraVigilance
Medicinal Product Dictionary
Pharmacovigilance
Basics & ICSR
What is Pharmacovigilance?
The World Health Organization (WHO) has
defined Pharmacovigilance as “science and
activities relating to the detection, assessment,
understanding and prevention of adverse
effects or any other medicine-related problem.
What is SUSAR?
A suspected unexpected serious adverse
reaction is known as a SUSAR.
A SUSAR is defined as an untoward and
unintended response to a study drug, which is
not listed in the applicable product
information, and meets one of the following
serious criteria: results in death, is life-
threatening, requires hospitalisation or
prolongation of an existing hospitalisation,
results in persistent or significant disability or
incapacity, or is a congenital anomaly or birth
defect.
What are reporting timelines for SUSAR
cases?
A SUSAR that meets the seriousness criteria
of life threatening and/or results in death
must be reported within seven (7) calendar
days. A SUSAR which if not life threatening or
does not result in death must be submitted to
the regulatory authorities within fifteen (15)
calendar days.
What is Rechallenge?
Rechallenge is the point at which a drug is
given again to a patient after its previous
withdrawal.
In the instance you have a positive
dechallenge (AE subsides or disappears after
you remove the drug), reintroducing the drug
represents a rechallenge.
A positive rechallenge (i.e., the AE
reappears when treatment is restarted),
strongly suggests a causal relationship.
What are different frequencies of ADRs?
In giving an estimate of the frequency of ADRs
the following standard categories are
recommended:
Very common > 10%
Common (frequent) >1% and <10%
Uncommon (infrequent) >0.1% and <1%
Rare >0.01% and <0.1%
Very rare <0.01%
What is CIOMS?
The Council for International Organizations of
Medical Sciences (CIOMS) is an international,
non-governmental, non-profit organization
established jointly by WHO and UNESCO in
1949.
CIOMS represents a substantial proportion of
the biomedical scientific community through
its member organizations, which include many
of the biomedical disciplines, national
academies of sciences and medical research
councils. CIOMS mission is to advance public
health through guidance on health research
and policy including ethics, medical product
development and safety. CIOMS is in official
relations with WHO and is an associate
partner of UNESCO.
CIOMS I: The international reporting form
CIOMS II: Periodic safety update reports
manual
CIOMS III: Core data sheets
CIOMS IV: Benefit-risk assessments
CIOMS V: Practical issues in
Pharmacovigilance
CIOMS VI: Clinical trial safety data
CIOMS VII: Development safety update
reports
CIOMS VIII: Practical Aspects of Signal
Detection in Pharmacovigilance
What are different GVP modules?
Module I – Pharmacovigilance systems and
their quality systems
Module II – Pharmacovigilance system master
file
Module III – Pharmacovigilance inspections
Module IV – Pharmacovigilance audits
Module V – Risk management systems (Rev.2)
Module VI – Collection, management and
submission of reports of suspected adverse
reactions to medicinal products (Rev. 2)
Module VI Addendum I – Duplicate
management of suspected adverse reactions
reports
Module VII – Periodic safety update report
Module VIII – Post-authorisation safety studies
Module VIII Addendum I – Requirements and
recommendations for the submission of
information on non-interventional post-
authorisation safety studies (Rev.3)
Module IX – Signal management
Module IX Addendum I – Methodological
aspects of signal detection from spontaneous
reports of suspected adverse reactions
Module X – Additional monitoring
Module XV – Safety communications (Rev.1)
Module XVI – Risk minimisation measures:
selection of tools and effectiveness indicators
(Rev. 2)
Module XVI Addendum I – Educational
materials
Module XVI Addendum II – Methods for
effectiveness evaluation
What is Overdose?
Administration of a quantity of a medicinal
product given per administration or
cumulatively which is above the maximum
recommended dose according to the
authorised product information.
What is IBD?
International Birth Date (IBD) is the date of the
first marketing authorisation for any product
containing the active substance granted to any
company in any country in the world.
What is DSUR?
Format and content for periodic reporting on
drugs under development.
Development Safety Update Report (DSUR)
is Comprehensive, thoughtful annual review
and evaluation of pertinent safety
information collected during the reporting
period related to a drug under
investigation, whether or not it is marketed.
A DSUR provides information to assure
regulators that sponsors are adequately
monitoring and evaluating the evolving
safety profile of the investigational drug.
What is ACO?
The addendum to the clinical overview (ACO)
collects all cumulated effectiveness and safety
data related to a medicinal product since MA or
its last renewal, in order to obtain a new renewal
for any medicinal product. It is an essential safety
report to reevaluate the current benefit/risk
balance, assuring patients’ health and safety.
A critical discussion should be provided
within the Addendum to the Clinical
Overview.
It should address the current benefit-risk
balance for the product on the basis of the
PSUR data and safety/efficacy data
accumulated since the granting of the MA or
the last renewal, making reference to
relevant new information in the public
domain.
What information should ACO contains?
The Addendum to the Clinical Overview should
contain the following information:
What is DHPC?
A communication intervention by which
important information is delivered directly to
individual healthcare professionals by a
marketing authorisation holder or by a
competent authority, to inform them of the need
to take certain actions or adapt their practices in
relation to a medicinal product.
What is PADER?
A PADER (Periodic Adverse Drug Experience
Report) is a part of post-cumulative safety
reports which need to be submitted to the
United States Food and Drug Administration
(USFDA).
What is REMS?
A Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy
(REMS) is a drug safety program that the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
can require for certain medications with
serious safety concerns to help ensure the
benefits of the medication outweigh its
risks.
REMS are designed to reinforce
medication use behaviors and actions
that support the safe use of that
medication.
While all medications have labeling
that informs health care stakeholders
about medication risks, only a few
medications require a REMS
REMS are not designed to mitigate all the
adverse events of a medication, these are
communicated to health care providers in
the medication’s prescribing information.
Rather, REMS focus on preventing,
monitoring and/or managing a specific
serious risk by informing, educating and/or
reinforcing actions to reduce the frequency
and/or severity of the event.
Signal Management
What is Signal?
Information arising from one or multiple sources,
including observations and experiments, which
suggests a new potentially causal association, or
a new aspect of a known association between an
intervention and an event or set of related
events, either adverse or beneficial, that is judged
to be of sufficient likelihood to justify verificatory
action.
New aspects of a known association may
include changes in the frequency, distribution
(e.g. gender, age and country), duration,
severity or outcome of the adverse reaction.
For the purpose of monitoring data in the
EudraVigilance database, only signals related
to an adverse reaction shall be considered.
For the purpose of Section 16.2 of the
periodic benefit-risk evaluation report, signals
relate to adverse effects.
1. Signals are continuously monitored and
evaluated by the company.
2. New signals which emerge, remain ongoing,
or are closed during the reporting period are
presented in the PSUR / PBRER.
What is Closed signal?
In periodic benefit-risk evaluation reports, a signal
for which an evaluation was completed during the
reporting interval.
A safety signal can be closed either because it is
refuted or because it is determined to be a
potential or identified risk following evaluation.
What is RMP?
Risk Management Plan (RMP) is a dynamic, stand-
alone document that should be updated
throughout the life-cycle of the medicinal product
to reflect the increasing knowledge on risks and
benefits and the post-marketing experience with
the product.
A detailed description of the risk management
system.
The risk management plan established by the
marketing authorisation holder shall contain the
following elements:
an identification or Characterisation of the
safety profile of the medicinal product(s)
concerned;
an indication of how to characterise further
the safety profile of the medicinal product(s)
concerned; (c) a documentation of measures
to prevent or minimise the risks associated
with the medicinal product, including an
assessment of the effectiveness of those
interventions;
a documentation of post-authorisation
obligations that have been imposed as a
condition of the marketing authorisation
What is RMS?
Risk management system (RMS) is a set of
pharmacovigilance activities and interventions
designed to identify, characterise, prevent or
minimise risks relating to medicinal products,
including the assessment of the effectiveness of
those activities and interventions.
The RMS covers the entire life-cycle of a medicinal
product.
What is eRMR?
The eRMR is a tool to perform signal detection
in EudraVigilance. This tool provides
aggregated data related to the ICSRs
submitted to EudraVigilance stratified by
different parameters and incorporates the
Reporting Odds Ratio (ROR) as a statistical
measure.
What is CCSI?
Company Core Safety Information (CCSI) is the
safety information contained in the CCDS.
The CCSI is generally used in all countries where
the company markets the medicinal product and
is the reference information used to determine
listed and unlisted events for the purpose of
periodic reporting for marketed products.
What is SmPC?
Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) is a
legal document approved as part of the
marketing authorisation of a medicinal product in
the European Union.
The SmPC is the basis of information for the
healthcare professional on how to use the
medicine. Its information is updated
throughout the life-cycle of the product as
new data emerge.
The SmPC is the reference information used
to determine expected or unexpected status
of events for marketed products for the
purpose of expedited reporting.
What is USPI?
United States Prescribing Information (USPI) sets
out the agreed usage of the drug. It provides
information on usage for healthcare
professionals and is an intrinsic part of the
application for marketing authorisation of a new
drug or medicine within the United States.
What is Package leaflet?
A leaflet containing information for the user
which accompanies the medicinal product.
Pharmacovigilance
System Master File
(PSMF)
What is Pharmacovigilance system master
file (PSMF)?
A detailed description of the pharmacovigilance
system used by the marketing authorisation
holder with respect to one or more authorised
medicinal products.
The PSMF shall be located either at the site in
the EU where the main pharmacovigilance
activities of the marketing authorisation
holder are performed or at the site in the EU
where the qualified person responsible for
pharmacovigilance operates.
It is a requirement of the marketing
authorisation application that summary
information about the pharmacovigilance
system is submitted to the competent
authorities. This summary includes
information on the location of the PSMF.
What is AEFI?
An adverse event following immunisation (AEFI) is
any untoward medical occurrence which follows
immunisation and which does not necessarily
have a causal relationship with the usage of the
vaccine. The adverse event may be any
unfavourable or unintended sign, abnormal
laboratory finding, symptom or disease. While
this AEFI definition is compatible with the
definition of adverse event applied in the EU, the
AEFI definition is not needed to describe
pharmacovigilance for vaccines in the EU.
However, EU guidance on pharmacovigilance for
vaccines makes use of the terminology suggested
by CIOMS-WHO20 regarding possible causes of
adverse events, turning them into suspected
adverse reactions. A coincidental event is an AEFI
that is caused by something other than the
vaccine product, immunisation error or
immunisation anxiety.
4) CMDh
https://www.hma.eu/310.html
6) ICH - MedDRA
https://www.ich.org/page/meddra
Thank you Note
Dear Readers,
Thank you for reading this eBook.
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Author is a post-graduate in
Pharmacy from renowned
NIPER institute.
www.pvdrugsafety.com