Namazy Jennifer, Chambers Christina, Sahin Leyla, Johnson Tamara, Dinatale Miriam, Lappin Brian, Schatz Michael
Allergy and Immunology, Scripps Clinic, La Jolla, Calif.
Department of Pediatrics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, Calif.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2020 Jun;8(6):1947-1952. doi: 10.1016/j.jaip.2020.01.056. Epub 2020 Feb 19.
On June 30, 2015, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) began implementation of the Pregnancy and Lactation Labeling Rule (PLLR), which replaced the pregnancy letter category system (A, B, C, D, and X) with integrated narrative summaries of the risks of using a drug or biological product during pregnancy and lactation. The letter category system, first established in 1979, was regarded as overly simplistic and misinterpreted as a grading system. The PLLR labeling format was created to improve the presentation of available data on use of the drug during pregnancy and/or lactation.
To survey clinician awareness, assessment, and use of this new labeling format.
In January 2018, an online survey, developed in collaboration between the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology and the FDA, was sent to a random sample of the US membership of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. The survey content consisted of questions addressing the following: demographic characteristics, awareness and use of the PLLR, and value and understanding of the PLLR format on the basis of an example of the "Pregnancy" subsection of labeling.
Of the 1500 members who received the survey via an email, 184 (12%) completed the survey. Respondents had a mean age of 56 years and treated on average 2 pregnant women per month. Less than half (46%) of the respondents were aware that the pregnancy letter category system was replaced with a narrative summary. After reading the example, most of the respondents (68%) did not feel that the narrative summary was concise. However, 71% of the respondents found the background risk and disease-associated risk information helpful. Most of the respondents (95%) continued to use the pregnancy letter category system to make prescribing decisions.
These survey results suggest that the PLLR format was not known by most prescribers and that the pregnancy letter category format is continuing to be used despite significant flaws in the old system. However, the survey did not address why prescribers were continuing to rely on the pregnancy letter category system. Whether this is due to the PLLR format itself or the lack of quality data to inform the safe use of medications in pregnancy cannot be determined from these survey results. The FDA will use these survey results to refine the communication of pregnancy safety information in labeling and will expand outreach efforts to educate health care providers in the new labeling system.
2015年6月30日,美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)开始实施《妊娠和哺乳期用药标签规则》(PLLR),该规则用关于在妊娠和哺乳期使用药物或生物制品风险的综合叙述性总结取代了妊娠字母分类系统(A、B、C、D和X)。字母分类系统于1979年首次确立,被认为过于简单化,并被误解为一种分级系统。PLLR标签格式的创建是为了改进关于药物在妊娠和/或哺乳期使用的现有数据的呈现方式。
调查临床医生对这种新标签格式的知晓情况、评估及使用情况。
2018年1月,由美国过敏、哮喘与免疫学会和FDA合作开发的一项在线调查被发送给美国过敏、哮喘与免疫学会美国会员的随机样本。调查内容包括以下问题:人口统计学特征、对PLLR的知晓和使用情况,以及基于标签“妊娠”小节示例对PLLR格式的价值和理解。
在通过电子邮件收到调查的1500名会员中,184名(12%)完成了调查。受访者的平均年龄为56岁,每月平均治疗2名孕妇。不到一半(46%)的受访者知晓妊娠字母分类系统已被叙述性总结所取代。阅读示例后,大多数受访者(68%)认为叙述性总结不够简洁。然而,71%的受访者认为背景风险和疾病相关风险信息很有帮助。大多数受访者(95%)在做出处方决定时继续使用妊娠字母分类系统。
这些调查结果表明,大多数开处方者并不了解PLLR格式,尽管旧系统存在重大缺陷,但妊娠字母分类格式仍在继续使用。然而,该调查并未涉及开处方者为何继续依赖妊娠字母分类系统。从这些调查结果无法确定这是由于PLLR格式本身还是缺乏用于指导孕期安全用药的高质量数据。FDA将利用这些调查结果完善标签中妊娠安全信息的传达,并将扩大宣传力度,对医疗保健提供者进行新标签系统的培训。