Calls and Grants, European & Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP), The Hague, The Netherlands.
Department de Farmacologia, Terapèutica i Toxicologia, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), Bellaterra, Spain.
Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2021 Aug;30(8):1123-1131. doi: 10.1002/pds.5249. Epub 2021 Apr 27.
The WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring (PIDM) is a large Pharmacovigilance network of countries sharing Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) reports. Pharmacovigilance Experts have suggested that antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an overlooked adverse event. We undertook this study to investigate the potential role of Pharmacovigilance databases in the surveillance of AMR.
Using the AWaRe (Access, Watch and Reserve) list and the WHO Priority Pathogens List, we established a list of antimicrobials and carried out a VigiBase search via VigiAccess, looking for ADR reports with Preferred Terms (PTs) that contained AMR-relevant information. Identified Terms were matched with codes from the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA Version 21.1).
Records on 86 drugs were retrieved with a total of 1 170 751 ADR reports submitted between 1968 and 2018. Seventeen PTs suggesting suspected resistance, ineffectiveness, inappropriate use, or medication error were used to code 15 250 reports. The most frequently used PTs were "Drug Ineffective" (45.6%), "Off label use" (9.5%) and "Pathogen Resistance" (8.9%). A group of six agents (Amoxicillin, Cefalotin, Ciprofloxacin, Clarithromycin, Levofloxacin and Daptomycin) accounted for 38% (n = 5806) of all 15 250 AMR-relevant ADR reports. The PTs most frequently used in 5806 reports were grouped in 4 categories: drug ineffectiveness (62.5%), resistance (19.2%), off-label use (12.1%) and prescription errors (6.2%).
Our findings suggest that Pharmacovigilance databases could serve as a tool in tracking antimicrobial use and resistance especially in settings where laboratory capacity is still in its development stages. National Pharmacovigilance centers could play a proactive role in stimulating the reporting of AMR-relevant ADRs which can serve as a basis for resistance suspicion alerts. Further studies focusing on the narrative and other clinical pharmacology details in ADR reports are required.
世界卫生组织(WHO)国际药物监测计划(PIDM)是一个由国家组成的大型药物警戒网络,共享药物不良反应(ADR)报告。药物警戒专家认为,抗生素耐药性(AMR)是一个被忽视的不良事件。我们进行这项研究是为了调查药物警戒数据库在监测 AMR 方面的潜在作用。
使用 AWaRe(访问、监测和储备)清单和世界卫生组织优先病原体清单,我们建立了一个抗生素清单,并通过 VigiAccess 在 VigiBase 上进行搜索,寻找包含 AMR 相关信息的首选术语(PT)的 ADR 报告。确定的术语与监管活动医学词典(MedDRA 版本 21.1)中的代码相匹配。
从 1968 年至 2018 年期间检索到 86 种药物的记录,共提交了 1170751 份 ADR 报告。使用 17 个疑似耐药、无效、不当使用或用药错误的 PT 对 15250 份报告进行编码。使用最频繁的 PT 是“药物无效”(45.6%)、“标签外使用”(9.5%)和“病原体耐药”(8.9%)。一组六种药物(阿莫西林、头孢菌素、环丙沙星、克拉霉素、左氧氟沙星和达托霉素)占所有 15250 份 AMR 相关 ADR 报告的 38%(n=5806)。在 5806 份报告中使用最多的 PT 分为 4 类:药物无效(62.5%)、耐药(19.2%)、标签外使用(12.1%)和处方错误(6.2%)。
我们的研究结果表明,药物警戒数据库可以作为跟踪抗生素使用和耐药性的工具,特别是在实验室能力仍处于发展阶段的地区。国家药物警戒中心可以发挥积极作用,鼓励报告与 AMR 相关的 ADR,这可以作为耐药性怀疑警报的基础。需要进一步研究侧重于 ADR 报告中的叙述和其他临床药理学细节。