Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland 20993, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2012 Jul;55(1):1-7. doi: 10.1093/cid/cis351. Epub 2012 Apr 5.
On 23 October 2009, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) for intravenous peramivir, an unapproved antiviral, to treat suspected or confirmed 2009 H1N1 influenza A virus infection. Eligible hospitalized patients were unresponsive to or unable to tolerate available antivirals or lacked dependable oral or inhaled drug delivery routes. The EUA required healthcare providers to report medication errors, selected adverse events (AEs), serious AEs, and deaths to the FDA.
An FDA safety team analyzed reports submitted to the Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS) and sought follow-up in selected cases.
The FDA received AERS reports for 344 patients (including 28 children and 3 pregnant women). Many patients were critically ill on mechanical ventilation (41%) and renal replacement therapies (19%); 38% had received oseltamivir. The most frequently reported serious AEs by MedDRA preferred term were death (15%), H1N1 influenza (8%), respiratory failure (8%), acute renal failure (7%), and acute respiratory distress syndrome (7%). Six medication errors were reported. Most deaths occurred among patients who were obese, immunosuppressed, aged >65 years, or received oseltamivir. Rash was the only treatment-emergent AE attributable to peramivir. Influenza severity, comorbidities, and concomitant medications confounded additional peramivir AE assessments. Missing clinical and laboratory data precluded evaluation of some reports.
Many peramivir recipients under the EUA were critically ill and at risk for influenza-related complications. The safety data were insufficient to assess whether peramivir affected outcome or caused adverse reactions other than rash. Clinical trials in hospitalized patients with serious influenza infections should provide additional information.
2009 年 10 月 23 日,美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)发布了静脉用帕拉米韦的紧急使用授权(EUA),用于治疗疑似或确诊的 2009 年 H1N1 流感 A 病毒感染。符合条件的住院患者对现有抗病毒药物无反应或无法耐受,或缺乏可靠的口服或吸入药物输送途径。EUA 要求医疗保健提供者向 FDA 报告药物错误、选定的不良事件(AE)、严重 AE 和死亡。
FDA 安全小组分析了向不良事件报告系统(AERS)提交的报告,并在选定病例中寻求随访。
FDA 收到了 344 名患者(包括 28 名儿童和 3 名孕妇)的 AERS 报告。许多患者在机械通气(41%)和肾脏替代治疗(19%)下病情危急;38%的患者接受了奥司他韦治疗。按 MedDRA 首选术语报告的最常见严重 AE 是死亡(15%)、H1N1 流感(8%)、呼吸衰竭(8%)、急性肾衰竭(7%)和急性呼吸窘迫综合征(7%)。报告了 6 起用药错误。大多数死亡发生在肥胖、免疫抑制、年龄>65 岁或接受奥司他韦治疗的患者中。皮疹是唯一与帕拉米韦有关的治疗后出现的 AE。流感的严重程度、合并症和伴随用药使对帕拉米韦其他 AE 的评估变得复杂。一些报告因缺少临床和实验室数据而无法评估。
许多根据 EUA 使用帕拉米韦的患者病情危急,有发生流感相关并发症的风险。安全性数据不足以评估帕拉米韦是否影响结局或引起皮疹以外的不良反应。在严重流感感染的住院患者中进行的临床试验应提供更多信息。