Gentry William M, Dotson Michael P, Williams Brian S, Hartley Melissa, Stafford Kristen R, Bottorff Michael B, Gandhi Pranav K
William M. Gentry, Pharm.D., is Assistant Professor and Executive Associate Dean; Michael P. Dotson is Pharm.D. candidate; Brian S. Williams is Pharm.D. candidate; Melissa Hartley is Pharm.D. candidate; Kristen R. Stafford is Pharm.D. candidate; Michael B. Bottorff, Pharm.D., FCCP, CLS, is Professor and Chair of Pharmacy Practice; and Pranav K. Gandhi, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice, School of Pharmacy, South College, Knoxville, TN.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2014 May 1;71(9):722-7. doi: 10.2146/ajhp130571.
Pegloticase-associated adverse events reported to the Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database in the United States were evaluated.
Retrospective data-mining analysis of FAERS case reports listing Krystexxa or pegloticase as the suspect drug and specific adverse events (cardiovascular events, infusion-related reactions, gout flares, and anaphylaxis) was conducted from the drug's approval date (September 14, 2010) through August 27, 2012. Initial and follow-up reports with the same primary linked identification number were identified as unique to each patient case. When multiple reports for the same patient were identified with a common case number, the report with the most recent date was used to eliminate duplicate reports. Bayesian confidence propagation neural network methodology was used to identify signals of drug-associated adverse events. A potential signal for drug-adverse event reports is generated when the lower limit of the 95% two-sided confidence interval of the information component is greater than 0.
A total of 118 unique cases of adverse events involving pegloticase in the United States were identified during the study period. Fourteen reports were related to pegloticase-associated cardiovascular events, and 35 were related to pegloticase-associated infusion-related reactions. Twenty-six reports were related to pegloticase-associated gout, and 11 were reports of pegloticase-associated anaphylaxis. Bayesian statistics identified potential signals for all pegloticase-associated adverse events (cardiovascular events, infusion reactions, gout flares, and anaphylaxis).
Analysis of pegloticase-associated adverse events submitted to the FAERS database found that cardiovascular events, infusion-related reactions, gout flares, and anaphylaxis occurred more frequently than was statistically expected.
对向美国食品药品监督管理局不良事件报告系统(FAERS)数据库报告的聚乙二醇化尿酸酶相关不良事件进行评估。
对FAERS病例报告进行回顾性数据挖掘分析,这些报告将Krystexxa或聚乙二醇化尿酸酶列为可疑药物,并涉及特定不良事件(心血管事件、输液相关反应、痛风发作和过敏反应),时间跨度从该药物获批日期(2010年9月14日)至2012年8月27日。具有相同主要关联识别号的初始报告和随访报告被认定为属于每个患者病例的唯一报告。当通过共同病例编号识别出同一患者的多份报告时,使用日期最新的报告以消除重复报告。采用贝叶斯置信传播神经网络方法来识别药物相关不良事件的信号。当信息成分的95%双侧置信区间下限大于0时,会生成药物不良事件报告的潜在信号。
在研究期间,美国共识别出118例涉及聚乙二醇化尿酸酶的独特不良事件病例。14份报告与聚乙二醇化尿酸酶相关的心血管事件有关,35份与聚乙二醇化尿酸酶相关的输液相关反应有关。26份报告与聚乙二醇化尿酸酶相关的痛风有关,11份是聚乙二醇化尿酸酶相关过敏反应的报告。贝叶斯统计识别出了所有聚乙二醇化尿酸酶相关不良事件(心血管事件、输液反应、痛风发作和过敏反应)的潜在信号。
对提交至FAERS数据库的聚乙二醇化尿酸酶相关不良事件的分析发现,心血管事件、输液相关反应、痛风发作和过敏反应的发生频率高于统计学预期。