| Literature DB >> 27148052 |
Joëlle Berrewaerts1, Laure Delbecque1, Pierre Orban2, Martin Desseilles1.
Abstract
In recent years, pharmacovigilance has undergone some major changes. First, the patient's active role in identifying and describing adverse drug reactions (ADRs) has gained recognition. Second, pharmacovigilance has increasingly incorporated information and communications technology (ICT). Patients can now upload their own reports of ADRs online. Data on intensive medication monitoring are now collected via the Internet and smartphones. Worldwide collection of AEs using smart phones might become the leading technique in Low and Middle Income Countries where broad mobile phone service can be managed cheaper than Internet communication. At the same time, researchers are exploring the potential for data sharing via online forums and Internet search engines. In particular we synthetize the Pros and cons of the various methods for gathering pharmacovigilance data (i.e., Web-based spontaneous reporting of adverse drug reactions; Intensive drug monitoring studies; Analysis of online forum postings; Use of mobile phone systems to monitor drug effects). This article describes these advances and highlights their respective contributions.Entities:
Keywords: adverse drug reactions; adverse events; ehealth; intensive medication monitoring; mobile apps; patient participation; pharmacovigilance; web-based reporting
Year: 2016 PMID: 27148052 PMCID: PMC4827142 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Pros and cons of the various methods for gathering pharmacovigilance data.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| –Faster and easier via the Internet than written reports. | –Targets individuals with ready Internet access, and is consequently unrepresentative of populations. |
| –More accessible for individuals with Internet access. | –Requires investment on the part of patients (taking the time to report ADRs). |
| –Requires fewer resources to manage data collection. | –Accuracy and reliability of reports are difficult to verify. |
| –Patient identity is difficult to verify. Are they actually patients? | |
| –Other aspects can be gathered at the same time: medication use, dosage taken, compliance, perceived effectiveness. | –Targets individuals with ready Internet access. |
| –Allows gathering longitudinal data. | –Participating patients are not necessarily representative of the reference population. |
| –Requires more resources to gather data (patient recruitment, emailing, etc.). | |
| –Studies generally include a limited number of patients, and are consequently not accessible to large populations. | |
| –Individuals who post comments are not required to follow a particular procedure or approach. | –Not everyone likes to post their comments on online forums. Only individuals who are willing to their experiences online will participate. Therefore, comments are unrepresentative of the population. |
| –The data are already shared on the Internet. Consequently, patients are not required to do anything further. | –Targets individuals with ready Internet access. |
| –The data are already online, and therefore do not need to be gathered. | –Does not allow follow-up over time. |
| –Allows rapid feedback on new-to-market drugs. | –Risk of excluding individuals such as the elderly or illiterate. |
| –Impossible to verify the accuracy or reliability of comments. | |
| –The analysis of forum comments is complex and time-consuming. | |
| –Allows reaching a wide population worldwide, including developing countries. | –Excludes individuals without access to a cell phone, smartphone, or tablet. |
| –Allows reaching individuals immediately at any location. | –Risks excluding the elderly. |
| –Requires more resources to gather data (patient recruitment, SMS messaging, etc.). | |
| –Studies generally include a limited number of patients, and are consequently not accessible to large populations. | |
State of the art, avenue for further development and issues that remain unresolved.
| Recent developments in pharmacovigilance. |
| –Patient participation. |
| –The ability to make spontaneous ADR reports online. |
| –Web-based intensive drug monitoring studies. |
| –Analysis of online forum postings. |
| –The use of mobile ehealth systems to monitor ADRs. |
| Future challenges. |
| –Raise patients’ awareness that they can report ADRs themselves. |
| –Raise awareness among patients and healthcare professionals of the importance of reporting ADRs so as to increase the number of reports. |
| –Standardise report questionnaires across countries to facilitate comparison and coding of data stored in databases. |
| –Rally all sections of the population to participate: the elderly, lower socioeconomic status groups, and the less educated. |
| –Explore strategies to generate online message sharing via health-specific social sites such as PatientsLikeMe, MedHelp, Inspire, CureTogether, etc. |
| –Make better use of databases generated by various methods (data mining issues). |
| Risks and liabilities |
| –Under-reporting of ADRs. |
| –Inherent differences between patient and healthcare professional reports. |
| –The population selection bias involved in many data collection methods. |
| –Overlooking the fact that the different ways to gather information on ADRs are complementary. |
| –The complexity of analyzing data gathered from online discussions and search engines. |
| –Data security and confidentiality issues for databases. |