Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics, Baltimore, Maryland;
Pediatrics. 2014 Mar;133(3):e716-24. doi: 10.1542/peds.2013-2946. Epub 2014 Feb 2.
Shortages of essential drugs, including critical chemotherapy drugs, have become commonplace. Drug shortages cost significant time and financial resources, lead to adverse patient outcomes, delay clinical trials, and pose significant ethical challenges. Pediatric oncology is particularly susceptible to drug shortages, presenting an opportunity to examine these ethical issues and provide recommendations for preventing and alleviating shortages. We convened the Working Group on Chemotherapy Drug Shortages in Pediatric Oncology (WG) and developed consensus on the core ethical values and practical actions necessary for a coordinated response to the problem of shortages by institutions, agencies, and other stakeholders. The interdisciplinary and multiinstitutional WG included practicing pediatric hematologist-oncologists, nurses, hospital pharmacists, bioethicists, experts in emergency management and public policy, legal scholars, patient/family advocates, and leaders of relevant professional societies and organizations. The WG endorsed 2 core ethical values: maximizing the potential benefits of effective drugs and ensuring equitable access. From these, we developed 6 recommendations: (1) supporting national polices to prevent shortages, (2) optimizing use of drug supplies, (3) giving equal priority to evidence-based uses of drugs whether they occur within or outside clinical trials, (4) developing an improved clearinghouse for sharing drug shortage information, (5) exploring the sharing of drug supplies among institutions, and (6) developing proactive stakeholder engagement strategies to facilitate prevention and management of shortages. Each recommendation includes an ethical rationale, action items, and barriers that must be overcome. Implemented together, they provide a blueprint for effective and ethical management of drug shortages in pediatric oncology and beyond.
基本药物(包括关键化疗药物)短缺已屡见不鲜。药物短缺耗费大量时间和财力,导致患者不良预后,延迟临床试验,并带来重大伦理挑战。儿科肿瘤学尤其容易受到药物短缺的影响,为研究这些伦理问题并提出预防和缓解短缺的建议提供了机会。我们召集了儿科肿瘤化疗药物短缺工作组(WG),就机构、机构和其他利益相关者协调应对短缺问题所需的核心伦理价值观和实际行动达成共识。跨学科、多机构的 WG 成员包括从事儿科血液肿瘤学的医生、护士、医院药剂师、生物伦理学家、应急管理和公共政策专家、法律学者、患者/家属权益维护者,以及相关专业协会和组织的领导者。WG 认可了 2 项核心伦理价值观:最大限度地提高有效药物的潜在效益和确保公平获得药物。在此基础上,我们制定了 6 项建议:(1)支持国家政策以预防短缺,(2)优化药物供应的使用,(3)平等优先考虑药物的循证用途,无论其是否发生在临床试验内或之外,(4)开发一个改进的信息共享中心,以共享药物短缺信息,(5)探索机构间药物供应的共享,以及(6)制定积极的利益相关者参与策略,以促进药物短缺的预防和管理。每个建议都包含伦理理由、行动项目和必须克服的障碍。共同实施这些建议为儿科肿瘤学及其他领域药物短缺的有效和伦理管理提供了蓝图。