Literature DB >> 28505041

The Potential Return on Public Investment in Detecting Adverse Drug Effects.

Krista F Huybrechts1, Rishi J Desai, Moa Park, Joshua J Gagne, Mehdi Najafzadeh, Jerry Avorn.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Many countries lack fully functional pharmacovigilance programs, and public budgets allocated to pharmacovigilance in industrialized countries remain low due to resource constraints and competing priorities.
OBJECTIVE: Using 3 case examples, we sought to estimate the public health and economic benefits resulting from public investment in active pharmacovigilance programs to detect adverse drug effects. RESEARCH
DESIGN: We assessed 3 examples in which early signals of safety hazards were not adequately recognized, resulting in continued exposure of a large number of patients to these drugs when safer and effective alternative treatments were available. The drug examples studied were rofecoxib, cerivastatin, and troglitazone. Using an individual patient simulation model and the health care system perspective, we estimated the potential costs that could have been averted by early systematic detection of safety hazards through the implementation of active surveillance programs.
RESULTS: We found that earlier drug withdrawal made possible by active safety surveillance would most likely have resulted in savings in direct medical costs of $773-$884 million for rofecoxib, $3-$10 million for cerivastatin, and $38-$63 million for troglitazone in the United States through the prevention of adverse events. By contrast, the yearly public investment in Food and Drug Administration initiated population-based pharmacovigilance activities in the United States is about $42.5 million at present.
CONCLUSION: These examples illustrate a critical and economically justifiable role for active adverse effect surveillance in protecting the health of the public.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28505041      PMCID: PMC5433260          DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000717

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Care        ISSN: 0025-7079            Impact factor:   2.983


  26 in total

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Authors:  David J Graham; Lanh Green; John R Senior; Parivash Nourjah
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9.  Incidence of hospitalized rhabdomyolysis in patients treated with lipid-lowering drugs.

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10.  Rhabdomyolysis with HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors and gemfibrozil combination therapy.

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