| Literature DB >> 24609467 |
Leo Russo1, Gary Schneider, Margarita Hauser Gardiner, Stephan Lanes, Paul Streck, Susan Rosen.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Well-designed pharmacoepidemiology studies address several limitations of postmarketing spontaneous reports in regard to signal evaluation. This study evaluated a signal of disproportionate reporting of acute pancreatitis cases observed in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) treated with MMX Multi Matrix System® (MMX®) mesalazine and demonstrated how inherent limitations of postmarketing reports were overcome.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24609467 PMCID: PMC4025187 DOI: 10.1007/s00228-014-1660-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 0031-6970 Impact factor: 2.953
Postmarketing spontaneous reporting data for pancreatitis with MMX® mesalazine
| Findings from spontaneous reporting systems | |
| Shire Global Safety System | • Higher rate of reporting for pancreatitis with MMX mesalazine (21.0 cases per 100,000 person-years of exposure) compared with another marketed controlled-release mesalazine formulation (controlled-release mesalazine; 1.3 cases per 100,000 person-years) |
| US FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS) database [ | • Disproportionate reporting of pancreatitis for MMX mesalazine compared with controlled-release mesalazine and delayed-release mesalazine [lower bound of the 95 % confidence interval of the Empirical Bayesian Geometric Mean (EB05) of pancreatitis cases: 5.78 for MMX mesalazine compared with 2.05 for controlled-release mesalazine and 1.92 for delayed-release mesalazine] |
| Limitations in interpretation [ | |
| • Reporting biases due to the difference in time on the US market of the compared drugs (MMX mesalazine launch in 2007, controlled-release mesalazine in 1993, and delayed-release mesalazine in 1992) | |
| • Underreporting overall and differential underascertainment between drugs | |
| • Source population (denominator) is unknown, resulting in inability to calculate true incidence rates | |
| • Incomplete reporting of patient covariates required to adjust for confounding | |
| • Incomplete supporting data to validate or adjudicate endpoints | |
FDA Food and Drug Administration
aFully validated safety database utilized for data entry, storage, and analysis of adverse event information received from sources including but not limited to healthcare practitioners, regulatory authorities, clinical trials, consumers, and the published medical literature. The database allows for aggregate report production and reporting of individual-case safety reports to regulatory authorities
Patient demographic and baseline characteristics
| Patient characteristic | MMX mesalazine ( | All comparators ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (median), years | 44.38 (44.0) | 47.44 (47.0) | 46.46 (46.0) |
| Age categories, | |||
| 18–19 | 130 (2.7) | 187 (1.8) | 318 (2.1) |
| 20–29 | 740 (15.6) | 1,367 (13.4) | 2,108 (14.1) |
| 30–39 | 1,031 (21.7) | 1,829 (18.0) | 2,862 (19.2) |
| 40–49 | 1,075 (22.6) | 2,172 (21.3) | 3,249 (21.8) |
| 50–59 | 1,013 (21.3) | 2,307 (22.7) | 3,322 (22.2) |
| 60–69 | 532 (11.2) | 1,451 (14.3) | 1,984 (13.3) |
| 70–79 | 164 (3.5) | 534 (5.2) | 698 (4.7) |
| ≥80 | 66 (1.4) | 329 (3.2) | 395 (2.6) |
| Gender, | |||
| Female | 2,528 (53.2) | 5,527 (54.3) | 8,060 (54.0) |
| Male | 2,223 (46.8) | 4,649 (45.7) | 6,876 (46.0) |
| Index date, | |||
| Year 2008 | 1,589 (33.4) | 3,958 (38.9) | 5,549 (37.2) |
| Year 2009 | 1,953 (41.1) | 3,608 (35.5) | 5,566 (37.3) |
| Year 2010 | 1,209 (25.4) | 2,610 (25.6) | 3,821 (25.6) |
| Common baseline pharmacotherapy (>10% of patients), | |||
| Acetaminophen | 904 (19.0) | 2,106 (20.7) | 3,010 (20.2) |
| Potassium chloride | 1,049 (22.1) | 1,827 (18.0) | 2,877 (19.3) |
| Hydrocodone | 650 (13.7) | 1,596 (15.7) | 2,246 (15.0) |
| Metronidazole | 627 (13.2) | 1,536 (15.1) | 2,165 (14.5) |
| Other mesalazine | 857 (18.0) | 1,035 (10.2) | 1,893 (12.7) |
| Ciprofloxacin | 546 (11.5) | 1,290 (12.7) | 1,839 (12.3) |
| Sodium bicarbonate | 560 (11.8) | 948 (9.3) | 1,508 (10.1) |
| Common pre-index medical conditions (>10% of patients), | |||
| Gastrointestinal inflammation | 1,851 (39.0) | 4,035 (39.7) | 5,891 (39.4) |
| Diarrhoea | 1,559 (32.8) | 3,353 (33.0) | 4,913 (32.9) |
| Abdominal pain | 1,110 (23.4) | 2,797 (27.5) | 3,910 (26.2) |
| Rectal hemorrhage | 1,111 (23.4) | 2,131 (20.9) | 3,245 (21.7) |
| Essential hypertension | 742 (15.6) | 2,047 (20.1) | 2,790 (18.7) |
| Hematochezia | 866 (18.2) | 1,666 (16.4) | 2,534 (17.0) |
| Gastrointestinal disorder | 584 (12.3) | 1,107 (10.9) | 1,691 (11.3) |
| Hyperlipidemia | 447 (9.4) | 1,166 (11.5) | 1,613 (10.8) |
| Hemorrhoids | 483 (10.2) | 1,007 (9.9) | 1,491 (10.0) |
| Benign colonic neoplasm | 485 (10.2) | 976 (9.6) | 1,463 (9.8) |
Acute pancreatitis incidence rates (IR) and incident rate ratios (IRR; crude and adjusted)
| Characteristic | MMX mesalazine | All comparators | IRR (95 % CI)a |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crude rates | |||
| Events, | 20 | 46 | |
| Person-time, years | 2,338.2 | 4,576.1 | |
| IR (95 % CI)b | 8.55 (5.54–13.21) | 10.05 (7.54–13.41) | 0.85 (0.48–1.47) |
| Age categories, years IR (95 % CI)b | |||
| 18–29 | 20.03 (10.15–39.53) | 29.70 (18.78–46.94) | 0.67 (0.25–1.63) |
| 30–39 | 10.68 (4.56–25.00) | 10.27 (5.20–20.27) | 1.04 (0.27–3.60) |
| 40–49 | 5.52 (1.88–16.22) | 4.32 (1.68–11.11) | 1.28 (0.19–7.55) |
| ≥50 | 4.32 (1.68–11.10) | 7.06 (4.35–11.47) | 0.61 (0.15–1.89) |
| Gender, IR (95 % CI)b | |||
| Female | 10.91 (6.37–18.66) | 8.94 (5.84–13.66) | 1.22 (0.56–2.55) |
| Male | 6.11 (2.96–12.61) | 11.23 (7.61–16.58) | 0.54 (0.20–1.29) |
| Adjusted rates | |||
| Events, | 20 | 21 | |
| Person-time, years | 2,220.07 | 1,958.90 | |
| Propensity-matched IR (95 % CI)b | 9.01 (5.81–13.96) | 10.72 (6.99–16.44) | 0.84 (0.46–1.55) |
| Adjusted 1 IR (95 % CI)c | 4.40 (1.94–9.98) | 5.62 (2.57–12.31) | 0.78 (0.42–1.46) |
| Adjusted 2 IR (95 % CI)d | 2.37 (0.91–6.15) | 3.10 (1.24–7.75) | 0.76 (0.41–1.43) |
| Age categories, years | |||
| 18–29 | |||
| Propensity-matched IR (95 % CI)b | 21.43 (10.72–42.86) | 26.77 (13.93–51.45) | 0.80 (0.31–2.08) |
| Adjusted 1 IR (95 % CI)c | 25.17 (10.50–60.33) | 32.76 (15.15–70.83) | 0.77 (0.29–2.01) |
| Adjusted 2 IR (95 % CI)d | 22.77 (8.52–60.86) | 30.66 (12.89–72.96) | 0.74 (0.28–1.95) |
| 30–39 | |||
| Propensity-matched IR (95 % CI)b | 11.10 (4.62–26.67) | 12.16 (5.06–29.22) | 0.91 (0.26–3.15) |
| Adjusted 1 IR (95 % CI)c | 9.06 (1.78–46.10) | 10.89 (3.01–39.38) | 0.83 (0.21–3.23) |
| Adjusted 2 IR (95 % CI)d | 3.61 (0.42–30.63) | 4.35 (0.78–24.29) | 0.83 (0.20–3.44) |
| 40–49 | |||
| Propensity-matched IR (95 % CI)b | 5.80 (1.87–17.99) | 4.80 (1.20–19.17) | 1.21 (0.20–7.24) |
| Adjusted 1 IR (95 % CI)c | 2.13 (0.26–17.66) | 1.89 (0.20–17.76) | 1.13 (0.18–6.99) |
| Adjusted 2 IR (95 % CI)d | 1.42 (0.13–15.19) | 1.25 (0.10–15.80) | 1.13 (0.18–7.00) |
| ≥50 | |||
| Propensity-matched IR (95 % CI)b | 4.55 (1.71–12.12) | 6.29 (2.62–15.12) | 0.72 (0.19–2.69) |
| Adjusted 1 IR (95 % CI)c | 3.56 (0.39–32.19) | 4.60 (0.99–21.25) | 0.77 (0.16–3.80) |
| Adjusted 2 IR (95 % CI)d | 1.80 (0.17–19.15) | 2.26 (0.37–13.86) | 0.80 (0.16–3.97) |
| Gender | |||
| Female | |||
| Propensity-matched IR (95 % CI)b | 11.52 (6.69–19.83) | 6.95 (3.32–14.59) | 1.66 (0.66–4.15) |
| Adjusted 1 IR (95 % CI)c | 7.72 (3.05–19.55) | 4.94 (1.81–13.51) | 1.56 (0.61–4.00) |
| Adjusted 2 IR (95 % CI)d | 3.58 (1.12–11.46) | 2.35 (0.70–7.83) | 1.52 (0.59–3.92) |
| Male | |||
| Propensity-matched IR (95 % CI)b | 6.41 (3.06–13.46) | 14.70 (8.71–24.82) | 0.44 (0.18–1.08) |
| Adjusted 1 IR (95 % CI)c | 2.00 (0.54–7.45) | 4.70 (1.43–15.38) | 0.43 (0.17–1.07) |
| Adjusted 2 IR (95 % CI)d | 1.05 (0.22–5.10) | 2.52 (0.58–10.98) | 0.42 (0.17–1.04) |
CI confidence interval
aMMX mesalazine relative to all comparators
bPer 1000 person-years
cAdjustment 1, adjusted for age category, gender, and daily dose
dAdjustment 2, adjusted for age category, gender, daily dose, steroids, enalapril, viral herpes, furosemide, sulfasalazine, and post-surgery procedures