PV 1
PV 1
The science and activities relating to the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention of adverse effects or any other drug-related problems.
Recently its concerns have been widened to include herbals, traditional and complementary medicines, blood products, biological medical devices and vaccines. (Source: The Importance of Pharmacovigilance, WHO 2002)
Changing pharmaceutical marketing strategies : Launch in many countries at a time Changing physician and patient preferences : Increasing use of drugs to improve quality of life Shift of supervised to self-administered therapy Easy accessibility : Increasing conversion of prescription drugs to OTC drugs Easy access by internet
Causality assessment : The evaluation of the likelihood that a medicine was the causative agent of an observed adverse reaction. Causality assessment is usually made according established algorithms. Dechallenge :
The withdrawal of a drug from a patient; the point at which the continuity, reduction or disappearance of adverse effects may be observed. Rechallenge :
The point at which a drug is again given to a patient after its previous withdrawal
Types of ADR
TYPE Type A (Augmented) Type B (Bizzare) CHARACTERISTIC Predicted by pharmacological mechanisms Not expected from the known pharmacological mechanisms EXAMPLE Hypotension by - blockers
Type C (Chronic)
Type D (Delayed)
Dementia by anticholinergics
Ophthalmopathy after chloroquine
Certain
Unassessable or Unclassifiable
Probably or likely
Unlikely
Where to report ?
In India , after completing the form sholud be
returned to the same Pharmacovigilance centre from where it was obtained. The forms are accepted only at the 28 peripheral centres Some centre like JIPMER, Pondicherry and AIMS, Kochi have web-based facility for ADR reporting.
How to Report ?
As per the ICH guidelines the Pharmacovigilance method can be categorized as :
Passive Surveillance
Intensified Reporting Spontaneous Reporting Case Series Stimulated Reports Sentinel Sites Drug Event Monitoring Registries Cross-sectional Study Case-control Study Cohort
Active Surveillance
Comparative Observational Studies Descriptive Studies Targeted Clinical Investigations
Death and life-threatening, associated (by Investigator) Cases Immediately or within 24 hours to entry site
Signal detection
Reported information on a possible causal association between an adverse event and a drug, the relationship being unclear or incompletely documented previously Process of signal detection
Signal generation
Signal strengthening
Assess the regulatory information relating to safety in order to determine what action, if necessary, needs to be taken to improve safe use.
Functions of WHO
Activities: Coordinating the WHO programme for International Drug Monitoring Collecting , assessing and communicating information Alerting regulatory authorities
AREAS OF WORK
Receipt, analysis and recording of worldwide adverse event data
VigiBase
VigiBase is the name for the WHO international ADR database. It is the largest and most comprehensive database developed and maintained by UMC. VigiBase is a unique collection of international drug safety data. The data is available in a wide range of services, from advanced neural network analysis to basic. Its common uses are signal detection, updating PSUR and comparing the reports
The regulatory authority can ask the manufacturer to develop a formal surveillance program
If risks outweigh the benefits then the drug is withdrawn from the market
PHARMACOVIGILANCE
Deals only with the adverse
drug reaction
Carried out throughout and
efficacy and market value of the drug Conducted during Phase IV of clinical trial
It is the sponsors
Thank You