Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Graduate School of Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Drug Saf. 2011 Nov 1;34(11):1101-14. doi: 10.2165/11592060-000000000-00000.
Knowledge on the safety of new medicines is limited at the time of market entry. Nearly half of all drugs used to treat HIV registered in the EU required ≥1 Direct Healthcare Professional Communication (DHPC) in the past 10 years for safety issues identified post-approval.
The aim was to evaluate the extent to which regulators and industry have addressed the risk of safety issues for HIV drugs based on prior experience with other drugs in the same class and whether doing so impacts development time of these drugs.
HIV drugs receiving ≥1 DHPC in the Netherlands between January 1999 and December 2008 were identified. Each drug with a DHPC ('index' drug) was paired with subsequently approved HIV drug(s) in the same class (Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical [ATC] 4th level) ['follow-on' drugs]. Characteristics of safety issues were extracted from the DHPCs of the 'index' drugs. European Public Assessment Reports (EPARs) were reviewed regarding whether the safety issues had been considered during development and approval. Consideration of previously identified safety issues in 'follow-on' drug applications was assessed regarding attention paid to adverse drug reaction (ADR) symptoms in pre-marketing studies, Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) and postmarketing commitments, and whether size of the safety population was in accordance with Regulatory guidelines. 'Index' drugs were also paired with drugs in the same class already on the market ('older' drugs). For 'older' drugs, we identified whether the safety issue led to appropriate changes in the current SmPC (January 2011) compared with the SmPC at the time of marketing authorization. Clinical development time was assessed using time from first patent application to market authorization as proxy, and comparison was made between 'index' and 'follow-on' drugs.
For 9 (43%) of the 21 centrally authorized HIV drugs, 11 serious safety issues that required a DHPC were identified. Two drugs were excluded from our analysis (DHPCs related to contamination/medication error). Six 'index' drugs were paired, each with one to six 'follow-on' drugs. Three concerned drug-drug interactions (DDIs); the other three were intracranial haemorrhage, neuromuscular weakness and severe skin/hepatic reactions. All but one 'follow-on' drug had information in the EPAR on that specific ADR (i.e. attention was paid to the ADR). The DDIs were addressed in pre-marketing studies and/or the SmPC. Two of the other ADRs were addressed by postmarketing surveillance commitments; intracranial haemorrhage was not addressed. Three safety issues for two 'index' drugs could not be paired with a 'follow-on' drug as no drug in the same class was approved after the corresponding DHPCs were issued. Five of the nine safety issues were added to at least one of the current SmPCs for the 'older' drugs already on the market at the time of DHPC issue. Two safety issues were already in the SmPC of the 'older' drugs at time of market approval and two were not introduced into the SmPC of 'older' drugs. Population size to assess short-term safety complied with the guidelines for four 'index', seven 'follow-on' and three 'older' drugs; population size to assess long-term safety complied for one, three and two drugs, respectively. For five drugs, EPARs did not provide adequate information on population size. No statistically significant difference in development time between 'index' and 'follow-on' drugs was found.
Generally, safety issues were taken into account in the approval process of other drugs in the class. The approaches were different and determined by the nature of the ADR. Taking safety issues into account in the approval process did not seem to impact on the time taken to perform the pre-approval clinical programme.
新药品在上市时对其安全性的了解有限。在过去的 10 年中,在欧盟注册用于治疗 HIV 的几乎所有药物中,有≥1 种因批准后发现的安全性问题而需要进行直接医疗保健专业人员沟通(DHPC)。
旨在评估监管机构和行业在多大程度上根据同类药物先前的经验来解决 HIV 药物的安全性问题,以及这样做是否会影响这些药物的开发时间。
确定了 1999 年 1 月至 2008 年 12 月期间在荷兰进行了≥1 次 DHPC 的 HIV 药物。每一种进行了 DHPC 的药物(“索引”药物)都与同一类别(解剖治疗化学[ATC]第 4 级)的随后批准的 HIV 药物(“后续”药物)进行配对。从“索引”药物的 DHPC 中提取了安全性问题的特征。审查了欧洲公共评估报告(EPAR),以了解在开发和批准过程中是否考虑了这些安全性问题。在“后续”药物申请中考虑先前确定的安全性问题,评估了在上市前研究、产品特性概要(SmPC)和上市后承诺中对药物不良反应(ADR)症状的关注程度,以及安全性人群的规模是否符合监管指南。“索引”药物也与已上市的同类药物(“旧”药物)进行了配对。对于“旧”药物,我们确定与安全性问题相关的 SmPC 是否在市场授权时与营销授权时的 SmPC 相比进行了适当的更改(2011 年 1 月)。使用从首次专利申请到市场授权的时间作为代理来评估临床开发时间,并在“索引”和“后续”药物之间进行比较。
在 21 种集中授权的 HIV 药物中,有 9 种(43%)确定了 11 种需要 DHPC 的严重安全问题。有两种药物被排除在我们的分析之外(与污染/用药错误相关的 DHPC)。6 种“索引”药物各配对一种至六种“后续”药物。有三种涉及药物相互作用(DDI);另外三种是颅内出血、肌肉无力和严重皮肤/肝脏反应。除了一种“后续”药物之外,所有药物的 EPAR 中都有关于特定 ADR 的信息(即关注了 ADR)。DDI 在上市前研究和/或 SmPC 中得到了处理。其他三种 ADR 通过上市后监测承诺得到了处理;颅内出血未得到处理。由于在相应的 DHPC 发布后没有批准同类别药物,两种“索引”药物的三种安全性问题无法与“后续”药物配对。对于当时已上市的“旧”药物,在九种安全性问题中有五种可添加到至少一种当前的 SmPC 中。在市场批准时,两种安全性问题已经在“旧”药物的 SmPC 中,两种安全性问题没有引入到“旧”药物的 SmPC 中。评估短期安全性的人群规模符合指南对四种“索引”药物、七种“后续”药物和三种“旧”药物的要求;评估长期安全性的人群规模符合一种、三种和两种药物的要求。对于五种药物,EPAR 没有提供关于人群规模的充分信息。没有发现“索引”和“后续”药物之间在开发时间上存在统计学上的显著差异。
一般来说,在同类药物的批准过程中考虑了安全性问题。这些方法因 ADR 的性质而异。在批准过程中考虑安全性问题似乎不会影响预批准临床方案的执行时间。