Literature DB >> 25519721

Causal assessment of pharmaceutical treatments: why standards of evidence should not be the same for benefits and harms?

Barbara Osimani1, Fiorenzo Mignini.   

Abstract

It is increasingly acknowledged both among epidemiologists and regulators that the assessment of pharmaceutical harm requires specific methodological approaches that cannot simply duplicate those developed for testing efficacy. However, this intuition lacks sound epistemic bases and delivers ad hoc advice. This paper explains why the same methods of scientific inference do not fare equally well for efficacy and safety assessment by tracing them back to their epistemic foundations. To illustrate this, Cartwright's distinction into clinching and vouching methods is adopted and a series of reasons is provided for preferring the latter to the former: (1) the need to take into account all available knowledge and integrate it with incoming data; (2) the awareness that a latent unknown risk may always change the safety profile of a given drug (precautionary principle); (3) cumulative learning over time; (4) requirement of probabilistic causal assessment to allow decision under uncertainty; (5) impartiality; and (6) limited and local information provided by randomised controlled trials. Subsequently, the clinchers/vouchers distinction is applied to a case study concerning the debated causal association between paracetamol and asthma. This study illustrates the tension between implicit epistemologies adopted in evaluating evidence and causality; furthermore, it also shows that discounting causal evidence may be a result of unacknowledged low priors or lack of valid alternative options. We conclude with a presentation of the changing landscape in pharmacology and the trend towards an increased use of Bayesian tools for assessment of harms.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25519721     DOI: 10.1007/s40264-014-0249-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Saf        ISSN: 0114-5916            Impact factor:   5.606


  52 in total

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2.  Comparison of evidence on harms of medical interventions in randomized and nonrandomized studies.

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4.  Bayesian methods for design and analysis of safety trials.

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Review 5.  The role of paracetamol in the pathogenesis of asthma.

Authors:  H Farquhar; A Stewart; E Mitchell; J Crane; S Eyers; M Weatherall; R Beasley
Journal:  Clin Exp Allergy       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 5.018

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10.  Prospective study of acetaminophen use and newly diagnosed asthma among women.

Authors:  R Graham Barr; Catherine C Wentowski; Gary C Curhan; Samuel C Somers; Meir J Stampfer; Joel Schwartz; Frank E Speizer; Carlos A Camargo
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2004-01-07       Impact factor: 21.405

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  4 in total

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Journal:  Drug Saf       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 5.606

Review 2.  Long-Acting β2-Agonists in Asthma: Enantioselective Safety Studies are Needed.

Authors:  Glenn A Jacobson; Sharanne Raidal; Morten Hostrup; Luigino Calzetta; Richard Wood-Baker; Mark O Farber; Clive P Page; E Haydn Walters
Journal:  Drug Saf       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 5.606

Review 3.  Drug-induced liver injury: Advances in mechanistic understanding that will inform risk management.

Authors:  M Mosedale; P B Watkins
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2017-01-11       Impact factor: 6.875

4.  Philosophical bias is the one bias that science cannot avoid.

Authors:  Fredrik Andersen; Rani Lill Anjum; Elena Rocca
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2019-03-13       Impact factor: 8.140

  4 in total

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