Perry Lucy T, Bhasale Alice, Hooimeyer Ashleigh, McEwin Eliza J, Mohammad Annim, Mintzes Barbara
School of Pharmacy and Charles Perkins Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, D17 John Hopkins Drive, Camperdown, NSW, 2006, Australia.
Pharmaceut Med. 2025 Jun 25. doi: 10.1007/s40290-025-00573-y.
Safety advisories provide critical information to clinicians and patients on the harms of medicines. Previous research has shown that national regulators vary in their decisions to issue safety warnings. However, it is not known whether clinicians receive similar information when regulators communicate about the same medicines' harms.
Our aim was to assess whether content provided to clinicians in safety advisories on risk, fatal outcomes, evidence and clinician advice was comparable.
This retrospective content analysis examines safety advisories issued by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration, Health Canada, the United Kingdom Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, and the US Food and Drug Administration between 2007 and 2016. Content was extracted from advisories issued on the same medicine and harm (n = 40), including evidence, risk quantification, fatal outcomes and clinician advice. A case study on pioglitazone and bladder cancer illustrates differences in regulatory communications.
Variation was seen in the detail and presentation of information on evidence, deaths, risk quantification and advice to clinicians. Specific advice to clinicians was provided in 70% (96/155) of advisories with no significant differences between regulators (p = 0.19). Evidence of harm was presented in 81% (130/160) of advisories and risk quantification in 61% (98/160). The type of evidence presented and directness of information differed however. In the pioglitazone case study, for example, regulators differed in how bladder cancer risks were characterised and advice provided.
Our analysis of safety advisories on the same harms of medicines indicates that while regulators provide similar content elements in safety advisories, risk messages to clinicians vary. This may lead to differences in knowledge and awareness between countries and potentially impact public health outcomes. Further transparency around regulatory decisions on safety advisories is needed.
安全建议为临床医生和患者提供有关药物危害的关键信息。先前的研究表明,各国监管机构在发布安全警告的决策上存在差异。然而,尚不清楚当监管机构就同一药物的危害进行沟通时,临床医生是否会收到类似的信息。
我们的目的是评估在安全建议中提供给临床医生的关于风险、致命后果、证据和临床医生建议的内容是否具有可比性。
这项回顾性内容分析研究了澳大利亚治疗用品管理局、加拿大卫生部、英国药品和医疗产品监管局以及美国食品药品监督管理局在2007年至2016年期间发布的安全建议。内容从针对同一药物和危害发布的建议中提取(n = 40),包括证据、风险量化、致命后果和临床医生建议。一项关于吡格列酮与膀胱癌的案例研究说明了监管沟通中的差异。
在证据、死亡情况、风险量化以及给临床医生的建议等信息的详细程度和呈现方式上存在差异。70%(96/155)的建议中提供了给临床医生的具体建议,各监管机构之间无显著差异(p = 0.19)。81%(130/160)的建议中呈现了危害证据,61%(98/160)的建议中进行了风险量化。然而,所呈现的证据类型和信息的直接程度有所不同。例如,在吡格列酮案例研究中,各监管机构在膀胱癌风险的描述方式和提供的建议方面存在差异。
我们对关于药物相同危害的安全建议的分析表明,虽然监管机构在安全建议中提供了类似的内容要素,但给临床医生的风险信息存在差异。这可能导致各国在知识和认识上存在差异,并可能影响公共卫生结果。需要提高安全建议监管决策的透明度。