Charles Perkins Centre and School of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia.
Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine Odense (CEBMO), Odense University Hospital and University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Pharmacol Res Perspect. 2020 Dec;8(6):e00680. doi: 10.1002/prp2.680.
Information on rare adverse effects is often limited when a medication is initially approved for marketing. Medicines regulators use safety advisories to warn health professionals and consumers about emerging harms. This study aimed to identify characteristics and advice provided in cardiac safety advisories released by regulators in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. This was a retrospective study of safety advisories about cardiac-related adverse events issued by these four international medicines regulators between 2010 and 2016. A descriptive overview was followed by a more detailed content analysis, focusing on recommended actions for health professionals, including monitoring advice. For the latter, we applied the systematic information for monitoring (SIM) scale to assess adequacy. Over this period, 164 safety advisories about cardiac harms were issued by the four regulators. There were 61 drugs with advisories of cardiac risk, only 9 (14.7%) of which had advisories from all regulators in countries where the drug was approved. The most common adverse events were cardiac arrhythmias (n = 97, 59.1%) and coronary artery disorders (n = 39, 23.8%). The most frequent advice to prescribers was to monitor patients (n = 74, 45.1%), although only 41.2% of these advisories provided detailed advice on how monitoring should occur. We found many differences in the decision to warn and the advice provided. Patient monitoring was most often recommended, but key information such as frequency or thresholds for action was often lacking. Healthcare professionals and consumers need consistent information about rare serious harms so that they can make informed decisions.
当一种药物最初获得上市批准时,关于罕见不良反应的信息通常是有限的。药品监管机构使用安全警示来警告卫生专业人员和消费者注意新出现的危害。本研究旨在确定澳大利亚、加拿大、英国和美国的监管机构发布的心脏安全警示中所具有的特点和提供的建议。这是一项对这四个国际药品监管机构在 2010 年至 2016 年期间发布的与心脏相关不良事件有关的安全警示进行的回顾性研究。首先进行描述性概述,然后进行更详细的内容分析,重点关注卫生专业人员的建议行动,包括监测建议。对于后者,我们应用了系统信息监测(SIM)量表来评估其充分性。在此期间,四个监管机构共发布了 164 份关于心脏危害的安全警示。有 61 种药物具有心脏风险警示,其中只有 9 种(14.7%)在批准药物的国家中得到了所有监管机构的警示。最常见的不良事件是心律失常(n=97,59.1%)和冠状动脉疾病(n=39,23.8%)。最常向处方者提出的建议是监测患者(n=74,45.1%),尽管只有 41.2%的这些警示提供了关于监测应如何进行的详细建议。我们发现,在发出警告和提供建议方面存在许多差异。患者监测通常是最常被推荐的,但关键信息,如监测的频率或阈值,通常是缺乏的。卫生保健专业人员和消费者需要关于罕见严重危害的一致信息,以便他们能够做出明智的决策。