| Literature DB >> 24985530 |
Richard D Boyce1, Patrick B Ryan, G Niklas Norén, Martijn J Schuemie, Christian Reich, Jon Duke, Nicholas P Tatonetti, Gianluca Trifirò, Rave Harpaz, J Marc Overhage, Abraham G Hartzema, Mark Khayter, Erica A Voss, Christophe G Lambert, Vojtech Huser, Michel Dumontier.
Abstract
The entire drug safety enterprise has a need to search, retrieve, evaluate, and synthesize scientific evidence more efficiently. This discovery and synthesis process would be greatly accelerated through access to a common framework that brings all relevant information sources together within a standardized structure. This presents an opportunity to establish an open-source community effort to develop a global knowledge base, one that brings together and standardizes all available information for all drugs and all health outcomes of interest (HOIs) from all electronic sources pertinent to drug safety. To make this vision a reality, we have established a workgroup within the Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics (OHDSI, http://ohdsi.org) collaborative. The workgroup's mission is to develop an open-source standardized knowledge base for the effects of medical products and an efficient procedure for maintaining and expanding it. The knowledge base will make it simpler for practitioners to access, retrieve, and synthesize evidence so that they can reach a rigorous and accurate assessment of causal relationships between a given drug and HOI. Development of the knowledge base will proceed with the measureable goal of supporting an efficient and thorough evidence-based assessment of the effects of 1,000 active ingredients across 100 HOIs. This non-trivial task will result in a high-quality and generally applicable drug safety knowledge base. It will also yield a reference standard of drug-HOI pairs that will enable more advanced methodological research that empirically evaluates the performance of drug safety analysis methods.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24985530 PMCID: PMC4134480 DOI: 10.1007/s40264-014-0189-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Saf ISSN: 0114-5916 Impact factor: 5.606
A sample of sources of information that could potentially contain evidence relevant to a suspected association between a drug and a health outcome of interest
| Information | Sources | Formats available | Indexing or terminological coding | How accessible to researchers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous adverse event case reports of suspected harms from medicines | WHO VigiBase® FAERS | VigiBase®—ICH E2B standard FAERS—relational database or flat file | MedDRA® (conditions), WHO-ART™ (conditions), WHO Drug Dictionary Enhanced™ (medicinal products), WHO Anatomical Therapeutic Classification (medicinal products) | VigiBase®—summary statistics will made available for public access FAERS—downloadable files updated quarterly or via queries to openFDA |
| Adverse reactions reported during pre-market drug studies | FDA SPL EU SmPC | SPL—XML documents implementing a custom HL7 CDA format SmPC—PDF documents | None at this time | SPL—web pages and downloadable files updated daily and indexed by the US National Library of Medicine’s DailyMed system SmPC—PDF files downloadable through the European Medicines Agency website |
| Written protocols for pre-market drug studies | Drugs at FDA ClinicalTrials.gov | Drugs at FDA—PDF documents ClinicalTrials.gov—text, HTML or XML | ClinicalTrials.gov—MeSH for conditions (partial coverage) | Drugs at FDA and ClinicalTrials.gov—web pages and downloadable files |
| Published case reports and research studies (randomized or observational) | Medical journals | XML, PDF or HTML documents | Some indexing with MeSH (PubMed) or Emtree (Embase) | Downloadable files, bibliographic databases such as PubMed, PubMed Central, and Embase |
| Systematic reviews of drug efficacy, effectiveness, and safety | Medical journals, regional and international collaboratives (e.g., Cochrane Collaboration, and the Drug Effectiveness Review Project) | PDF or HTML documents | Some indexing with MeSH (PubMed) or Emtree (Embase) | Downloadable files, bibliographic databases such as PubMed, PubMed Central, Embase, Cochrane Library, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Effective Healthcare Program, Drug Effectiveness Review Project |
| Observational healthcare data (claims and medical records) | Health systems, public or private research groups, proprietary claims databases | Depends on the data source, complex queries are needed to extract aggregate facts from raw patient level data | Depends on the data source | Usually specific to the source, often requires license and/or data use agreement |
| Drug indication, mechanism of action, contraindications and side effects, targets, interactions, pharmacokinetic parameters, side effects | SPLs Proprietary drug information compendia (e.g., First Data Bank™) DrugBank SIDER | SPLs—unstructured text in XML documents Compendia—various formats DrugBank—XML, RDF SIDER—tab-delimited text, RDF | SPLs—none at this time Compendia—various DrugBank—UniProt (targets) SIDER—STITCH (drugs) and MedDRA® (side effects) | SPLs—see above Compendia—various DrugBank—downloadable files (XML), queries (RDF) SIDER—downloadable files (text), queries (RDF) |
CDA Clinical Document Architecture®, E2B Data Element for Transmission of Individual Case Safety Reports, EU European Union, FAERS FDA Adverse Event Reporting System, FDA US Food and Drug Administration, HL7 Health Level Seven International, HTML Hypertext Markup Language, ICH International Conference on Harmonisation, MeSH Medical Subject Headings, MedDRA Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities, PDF Adobe Portable Document Format, RDF Resource Description Framework, SIDER Side Effect Resource, SmPC Summary of Product Characteristics, SPL Structured Product Labeling, STICH Search Tool for Interactions of Chemicals, WHO World Health Organization, XML eXtensible Markup Language
Reference sets established to support methodological research in drug safety
| Positive controls | Negative controls | Labeling | Literature | Spontaneous data | Observational data | Mechanism of action | Sampling frame | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alvarez et al. [ | 532 | x | 267 centrally authorized drugs in EU with at least 1 year of safety information submitted by manufacturer, time-stamped with when the safety issue was first brought up for discussion within the EMA Signal Management Team | |||||
| Hochberg et al. [ | 6,207 | x | x | 35 drugs approved in 2000, 2002, and 2004 | ||||
| OMOP v1 [ | 9 | 44 | x | x | x | Chose ten drug-outcome positive controls, looked for negative controls within matrix of ten drugs and ten outcomes | ||
| OMOP v2 [ | 165 | 234 | x | x | Four outcomes, goal to find all positives/negatives meeting criteria | |||
| EU-ADR [ | 44 | 50 | x | x | x | x | Ten outcomes, goal to find five positives/five negatives |
EMA European Medicines Agency, EU European Union, OMOP Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership, EU-ADR Exploring and Understanding Adverse Drug Reactions by Integrative Mining of Clinical Records and Biomedical Knowledge
Fig. 1Information sources proposed for the initial version of the OHDSI knowledge base. ATC Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System, EHR electronic health record, FAERS Federal Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System, FDB™ First DataBank, GAD Genetic Association Database, GPI Generic Product Identifier, GWAS Genome-wide association study, HOI health outcome of interest, ICD-10 International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification, MeSH Medical Subject Headings, NDC National Drug Code Directory, NDF-RT National Drug File-Reference Terminology, OHDSI Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics, OMIM Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man, SmPC EU Summary of Product Characteristics, SNOMED Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine, SPL Structured Produce Labeling
Fig. 2A systems view of OHDSI knowledge base development. HOI health outcome of interest, OHDSI Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics
Fig. 3Expert users will drive both the content of the knowledge base and provide feedback that will help improve the drug–HOI prediction algorithm. In this hypothetical example, the experts are able to “drill down” to review important information on various evidence items present in the KB that support an association between drug X and renal failure. ATC Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System, EHR electronic health record, HOI health outcome of interest, KB knowledge base, OHDSI Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics
Hypothetical output of the knowledge base when queried for evidence of an association between drug X and renal failure. Bold text indicates hypothetical hyperlinks that will take the expert directly to more detailed information
| Drug | ATC | HOI | Contra-indicated | US SPL | EU SmPC | Scientific literature | FDA FAERS | VigiBase® | EHR/Claims data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X | Beta blocker | Renal failure syndrome (disorder) | False |
|
|
|
PRR: 4.5 Renal failure (April 1 2014) |
PRR: 3.3 Renal failure (April 1 2014) | Associations:
OR: 3.3
OR: 2.2 |
ATC Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System, EHR electronic health record, EU European Union, FAERS FDA Adverse Event Reporting System, FDA US Food and Drug Administration, HOI health outcome of interest, OR odds ratio, PRR proportional reporting ratio, RCT randomized controlled trial, SmPC Summary of Product Characteristics, SPL Structured Product Labeling
| The individuals who possess the expertise to synthesize evidence on a medication’s safety are hindered by numerous disconnected “islands of information” |
| A workgroup within the Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics (OHDSI, |
| Striving toward the goal of a generally useful knowledge base, though ambitious, is necessary for advancing the science of drug safety because it will make it simpler for practitioners to access, retrieve, and synthesize evidence so that they can reach a rigorous and accurate assessment of causal relationships between a given drug and the health outcome of interest |