Pharmacovigilance

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Pharmacovigilance Basics & ADRs - Drug Reaction Radar

  • Pharmacovigilance (PV): Science and activities for detection, assessment, understanding, and prevention of Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) and other drug-related problems.
    • Aims: Enhance patient care & safety, improve public health, promote rational drug use.

⭐ "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." - WHO definition of ADR.

  • ADR Classification (Rawlins & Thompson)
    • 📌 Mnemonic: Augmented, Bizarre, Chronic, Delayed, End-of-use, Failure.
TypeNameCharacteristicsExample
AAugmentedDose-related, predictable, common, ↓mortalityHypoglycemia with insulin
BBizarreNon-dose-related, unpredictable, rare, ↑mortalityAnaphylaxis to penicillin
CChronicDose & time-related, uncommonAnalgesic nephropathy
DDelayedTime-related, uncommonTardive dyskinesia
EEnd-of-useWithdrawal, uncommonOpiate withdrawal syndrome
FFailureUnexpected failure of therapy, commonAntibiotic resistance

ADR Reporting & Causality - The Clue Collectors

  • ADR Reporting: Essential for drug safety monitoring.
    • Core: Spontaneous Reporting Systems (SRS) like "Yellow Card" (UK), MedWatch (USA).
    • India: Pharmacovigilance Programme of India (PvPI) via Suspected ADR Reporting Form.
    • Who reports: Healthcare professionals (doctors, pharmacists, nurses), patients.
  • Causality Assessment: Establishes likelihood of drug causing ADR.
    • Naranjo Algorithm: Quantitative scoring method.
      • 9: Definite

      • 5-8: Probable
      • 1-4: Possible
      • 0: Doubtful
    • WHO-UMC Causality Categories: Certain, Probable/Likely, Possible, Unlikely, Conditional/Unclassified, Unassessable.
    • Key elements: Temporal relationship, dechallenge (withdrawal), rechallenge (re-administration, use with caution), ruling out other causes/diseases.

⭐ The Pharmacovigilance Programme of India (PvPI) was launched in 2010 and is coordinated by the Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission (IPC).

Signal Detection & Risk Management - Early Warnings, Safe Actions

  • Signal Detection: Identifying new/changed drug-Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) associations.

    • Methods: Spontaneous Reporting Systems (SRS) like PvPI (Pharmacovigilance Programme of India), data mining (e.g., WHO's VigiBase), active surveillance (e.g., cohort event monitoring).
    • Goal: Early warning for potential safety issues.

    ⭐ A 'signal' in pharmacovigilance refers to reported information on a possible causal relationship between an adverse event and a drug, the relationship being unknown or incompletely documented previously.

  • Risk Management Plan (RMP): Proactive strategy to ensure benefits of a drug outweigh its risks.

    • Core Elements:
      • Safety Specification: Summary of important identified and potential risks.
      • Pharmacovigilance (PV) Plan: How risks will be further characterized and monitored.
      • Risk Minimisation Measures: Interventions to prevent/reduce ADR occurrence or severity (e.g., educational materials, restricted access/prescribing).

Pharmacovigilance signal detection for cardiovascular risk

Special Considerations - Sensitive Scenarios & Slips

  • Special Populations: Vigilance crucial.

    • Pregnancy: Teratogenicity risk (e.g., ACEIs, Valproate). Pregnancy and Lactation Labeling Rule (PLLR).

    • Lactation: Drug excretion in milk; assess infant risk (e.g., opioids, sedatives).

    • Pediatrics: Dose adjustments (mg/kg, BSA); altered Pharmacokinetics/Pharmacodynamics (PK/PD).

    • Geriatrics: Polypharmacy, ↓renal function, ↑ADR susceptibility. Beers criteria. Start low, go slow.

  • Medication Errors (MEs): Preventable harm.

    • Types: Prescribing (wrong drug/dose), dispensing (Look-Alike Sound-Alike [LASA] drugs), administration (wrong route/rate), monitoring.
    • Prevention: 📌 5 R's: Right Patient, Right Drug, Right Dose, Right Route, Right Time. Medication reconciliation, error reporting culture.

⭐ Medication errors are any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm while the medication is in the control of the health care professional, patient, or consumer.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Pharmacovigilance aims to detect, assess, understand, and prevent Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs).
  • ADRs are classified into Type A (Augmented, dose-dependent, predictable) and Type B (Bizarre, non-dose-dependent, unpredictable).
  • Spontaneous reporting by healthcare professionals is crucial for ADR monitoring.
  • Causality assessment tools like the Naranjo algorithm help determine drug-ADR linkage.
  • Signal detection involves identifying new or poorly documented ADR associations.
  • The Pharmacovigilance Programme of India (PvPI) coordinates national efforts.
  • Serious ADRs require mandatory reporting to regulatory authorities.

Practice Questions: Pharmacovigilance

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