Literature DB >> 15899105

Post-marketing surveillance: a UK/European perspective.

Stephen Gough1.   

Abstract

The granting of regulatory approval allows medical practitioners to prescribe a drug in a controlled way to a group of patients defined within the licence. Prior to this, the new product may have been evaluated often in less than 5000 patients and usually in a selected environment in which many patients have been excluded, including for example, women of childbearing potential, the elderly and children. Co-existent disease and the concomitant use of a number of common drug treatments also frequently exclude patients from pre-licensing trials. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that many adverse drug reactions are only detected once the product has been prescribed to the general population. National and international regulatory bodies, therefore, provide systems for post-marketing pharmacosurveillance, although participation in these by clinicians is generally voluntary and under-reporting is widespread. Post-marketing surveillance (PMS) studies are not generally an integral component to launching a new drug and many clinicians are sceptical over data generated in trials which do not conform to the 'gold standard' randomised control trial (RCT) design. However, in dismissing such studies, a great opportunity to obtain information, often from many thousands of subjects, is being missed. This article discusses post-marketing pharmacovigilance and the role of PMS studies in the context of current UK and European legislation.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15899105     DOI: 10.1185/030079905X41426

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Med Res Opin        ISSN: 0300-7995            Impact factor:   2.580


  7 in total

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4.  Experience of safety monitoring in the context of a prospective observational study of artemether-lumefantrine in rural Tanzania: lessons learned for pharmacovigilance reporting.

Authors:  Abdunoor M Kabanywanyi; Nathan Mulure; Christopher Migoha; Aggrey Malila; Christian Lengeler; Raymond Schlienger; Blaise Genton
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5.  Transnational pharmacogovernance: emergent patterns in the jazz of pharmaceutical policy convergence.

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Authors:  J Gumprecht; M Benroubi; V Borzi; R Kawamori; J Shaban; S Shah; M Shestakova; Y Wenying; R Ligthelm; P Valensi
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7.  Global Post-Authorization Safety Surveillance Study: real-world data on prophylaxis and on-demand treatment using FEIBA (an activated prothrombin complex concentrate).

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  7 in total

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