Specialist Cohort Event Monitoring Studies: A New Study Method for Risk Management in Pharmacovigilance

被引:0
|
作者
Deborah Layton
Saad A. W. Shakir
机构
[1] Drug Safety Research Unit,Associate Department of the School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences
[2] University of Portsmouth,undefined
来源
Drug Safety | 2015年 / 38卷
关键词
European Union; Secondary Care; Asenapine; Risk Management Plan; Secondary Care Setting;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The evolving regulatory landscape has heightened the need for innovative, proactive, efficient and more meaningful solutions for ‘real-world’ post-authorization safety studies (PASS) that not only align with risk management objectives to gather additional safety monitoring information or assess a pattern of drug utilization, but also satisfy key regulatory requirements for marketing authorization holder risk management planning and execution needs. There is a need for data capture across the primary care and secondary care interface, or for exploring use of new medicines in secondary care to support conducting PASS. To fulfil this need, event monitoring has evolved. The Specialist Cohort Event Monitoring (SCEM) study is a new application that enables a cohort of patients prescribed a medicine in the hospital and secondary care settings to be monitored. The method also permits the inclusion of a comparator cohort of patients receiving standard care, or another counterfactual comparator group, to be monitored concurrently, depending on the study question. The approach has been developed in parallel with the new legislative requirement for pharmaceutical companies to undertake a risk management plan as part of post-authorization safety monitoring. SCEM studies recognize that the study population comprises those patients who may have treatment initiated under the care of specialist health care professionals and who are more complex in terms of underlying disease, co-morbidities and concomitant medications than the general disease population treated in primary care. The aims of this paper are to discuss the SCEM new-user study design, rationale and features that aim to address possible bias (such as selection bias) and current applications.
引用
收藏
页码:153 / 163
页数:10
相关论文
共 5 条
  • [1] Drug Utilization of Intrinsa® (Testosterone Patch) in EnglandInterim Analysis of a Prescription-Event Monitoring Study to Support Risk Management
    Vicki Osborne
    Lorna Hazell
    Deborah Layton
    Saad A.W. Shakir
    Drug Safety, 2010, 33 : 213 - 221
  • [2] Pharmacovigilance Characteristics and Activities within the First Cohort of EU Risk Management Plans (RMPs): Small Molecules vs. Biologicals
    Giezen, T. J.
    Mantel-Teeuwisse, A. K.
    Straus, S. M. J. M.
    Egberts, A. C. G.
    Persson, I
    Leufkens, H. G. M.
    DRUG SAFETY, 2008, 31 (10) : 896 - 897
  • [3] Pharmacovigilance Characteristics and Activities within the First Cohort of EU Risk Management Plans (RMPs): Small Molecules vs. Biologicals
    T. J. Giezen
    A. K. Mantel-Teeuwisse
    S. M. J. M. Straus
    A. C. G. Egberts
    I. Persson
    H. G. M. Leufkens
    Drug Safety, 2008, 31 : 885 - 885
  • [4] Descriptive Analysis for the Trend of Pharmacovigilance Planning in Risk Management Plans on New Drugs Approved During 2016-2019
    Kohama, Mei
    Nonaka, Takahiro
    Uyama, Yoshiaki
    Ishiguro, Chieko
    THERAPEUTIC INNOVATION & REGULATORY SCIENCE, 2023, 57 (01) : 37 - 47
  • [5] Indicators of Drug-Seeking Aberrant Behaviours: The Feasibility of Use in Observational Post-Marketing Cohort Studies for Risk Management
    Deborah Layton
    Vicki Osborne
    Mohammad Al-Shukri
    Saad A. W. Shakir
    Drug Safety, 2014, 37 : 639 - 650