| Literature DB >> 29500798 |
Sieta T de Vries1, Maartje J M van der Sar1,2, Anna Marie Coleman3, Yvette Escudero4, Alfonso Rodríguez Pascual4, Miguel-Ángel Maciá Martínez4, Amelia Cupelli5, Ilaria Baldelli5, Ivana Šipić6, Adriana Andrić6, Line Michan7, Petra Denig1, Peter G M Mol8,9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: National competent authorities (NCAs) use Direct Healthcare Professional Communications (DHPCs) to communicate new drug safety issues to healthcare professionals (HCPs). More knowledge is needed about the effectiveness of DHPCs and the extent to which they raise awareness of new safety issues among HCPs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29500798 PMCID: PMC5990574 DOI: 10.1007/s40264-018-0643-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Saf ISSN: 0114-5916 Impact factor: 5.606
Summary of the drugs for which the safety updates were assessed in this study
| Characteristic | Combined hormonal contraceptives | Diclofenac | Valproate | Ivabradine |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indicated for/treatment of | Contraception | Relieving pain and inflammation | Generalised, partial or other epilepsy; bipolar disorder | Symptomatic treatment of chronic stable angina pectoris. Treatment of chronic heart failure |
| Most common prescriber | GPs | GPs | Neurologists, psychiatrists | Cardiologists |
| New safety information | Risk of VTE. Confirmation that the absolute risk of VTE with all CHCs is small and ranges from 5 to 12 cases of VTE per 10,000 women per year, but that differences exist depending on the type of progestogen they contain and for a given dose of oestrogen, with levonorgestrel, norethisterone or norgestimate (so called second generation) having the lowest risk as per the available evidence | Risk of cardiovascular events. The same cardiovascular precautions now apply for diclofenac as for selective COX-2 inhibitors, i.e. ‘coxibs’ | Risk of teratogenicity. Further characterisation of the teratogenic effects: children exposed in utero are at a high risk of serious developmental disorders (in up to 30–40% of cases) and/or congenital malformations (in approximately 10% of cases) | Risk of cardiovascular events. A small but significant increase of the combined risk of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and cardiac failure was seen in patients with symptomatic angina [ |
| Implications of the new safety information | Careful consideration to be given to the new evidence when prescribing CHCs in addition to emphasising existing contraindications for use and evaluating the individual woman’s current risk factors for VTE | Use contraindicated in ischaemic heart disease, peripheral arterial disease, cerebrovascular disease, and congestive heart failure. Careful consideration to be given to an individual’s risk factors for cardiovascular events before prescribing (e.g. hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidaemia, and smoking) | Valproate should not be used in female children/adolescents of childbearing potential or pregnant women unless other treatments are ineffective or not tolerated. It must be started and supervised by a doctor experienced in managing epilepsy or bipolar disorder. All female patients must be informed of and fully understand the risks of use during pregnancy | Ivabradine is indicated only for symptomatic treatment of chronic stable angina pectoris because ivabradine has no benefits on cardiovascular outcomes (e.g. myocardial infarction or cardiovascular death) in patients with symptomatic angina. Serial heart rate measurements are required prior to initiation of therapy or prior to dose titration. Concomitant use with verapamil or diltiazem is contraindicated. Treatment should only be initiated in patients with a resting heart rate of at least 70 bpm |
| Year of DHPC | 2014 | 2013 | 2014 | 2014 |
| Distribution of DHPC per country | ||||
| | ||||
| Croatia | Hardcopy, point-of-care alerts for HCPs at primary level, NCA website and newsletter | Hardcopy, point-of-care alerts for HCPs at primary level, NCA website and newsletter | Hardcopy, point-of-care alerts for HCPs at primary level, NCA website and newsletter | Hardcopy, point-of-care alerts for HCPs at primary level, NCA website and newsletter |
| Denmark | Electronic and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website |
| Ireland | Hardcopy letter (also published on NCA website and article included in electronic NCA newsletter) | Hardcopy letter (also published on NCA website and article included in electronic NCA newsletter) | Hardcopy letter (also published on NCA website and article included in electronic NCA newsletter) | Hardcopy letter (also published on NCA website and article included in electronic NCA newsletter) |
| Italy | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website |
| Netherlands | Hardcopy, NCA website and NCA newsletter | Hardcopy, NCA website and NCA newsletter | Hardcopy, NCA website and NCA newsletter | Hardcopy, NCA website and NCA newsletter |
| Norway | Hardcopy and point-of-care-alerts | Hardcopy and point-of-care-alerts | Hardcopy and point-of-care-alerts | N/A |
| Spain | Electronic and NCA website | Electronic and NCA website | Electronic and NCA website | Electronic and NCA website |
| Sweden | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website | Hardcopy and NCA website |
| UK | Electronic cascade distribution and NCA website | Hardcopy letter and NCA website | Electronic cascade distribution and NCA website | Hardcopy letter and NCA website |
| | ||||
| Croatia | Gynaecologists, GPs, pharmacists, selected learned societies, hospitals’ medicines committees | Internists, rheumatologists, GPs, pharmacists | Neurologists, psychiatrists, gynaecologists, GPs, pharmacists, selected learned societies, hospitals’ medicines committees | Cardiologists, internists, GPs, selected learned societies, hospitals’ medicines committees |
| Denmark | Danish medical societies, GPs association, Danish medical association, medical society for gynaecology and obstetrics | GPs, pharmacists, internists, rheumatologists | GPs, neurologists, psychiatrists, paediatricians, clinical pharmacologists, industrial medical officers, medical societies for neurology, psychiatry and clinical pharmacology, patient societies for epilepsia and psychiatry | GPs, cardiologists, internists in cardiology departments, medical societies for cardiology and GPs, Danish Heart Association |
| Ireland | GPs, family planning clinics, pharmacists, obstetricians, gynaecologists | GPs, all consultants (specialists), pharmacists, dentists | Neurologists, psychiatrists, GPs, obstetricians, gynaecologists, family planning centres, pharmacists, relevant HCP professional organisations | GPs, cardiologists, geriatricians, general medicine consultants, pharmacists |
| Italy | Gynaecologists, emergency room physicians, pneumologists, cardiologists, haematologists, hospital pharmacists, relevant scientific and HCP organisations/patient organisations | GPs, internists, cardiologists, rheumatologists, orthopaedics, geriatrics, pharmacists | Neurologists, psychiatrists, GPs, obstetricians/gynaecologists, family planning centres, midwife, pharmacists (community and hospital), relevant scientific and HCP organisations/patient organisations | Internists, cardiologists, GPs, relevant learned societies |
| Netherlands | GPs, gynaecologists, pharmacists, hospital pharmacists | GPs, rheumatologists, internists, pharmacists, hospital pharmacists, orthopaedics | Neurologists, psychiatrists, gynaecologists, paediatricians and paediatric nurses, obstetricians, pharmacists | Cardiologists, GPs, hospital pharmacists |
| Norway | GPs, pharmacists, gynaecologists, midwifes, public health nurses, emergency medical services, hospital surgical and internal medicine wards | GPs, pharmacists, internists, rheumatologists, surgeons, orthopaedists, emergency medical services | GPs, pharmacists, gynaecologists, neurologists, psychiatrists, midwifes, industrial medical officers | N/A |
| Spain | GPs, gynaecologists, clinical pharmacologists, community pharmacists, PhV centres | GPs, geriatricians, internal medicine specialists, rheumatologists, traumatologists, rehabilitation specialists, pharmacists (community and hospital), PhV centres | Psychiatrists, neurologists, GPs, paediatricians, clinical pharmacologists, pharmacists (community and hospital), PhV centres | Cardiologists, GPs, internal medicine specialists, geriatricians, clinical pharmacologists, pharmacists (community and hospital), PhV centres |
| Sweden | GPs, gynaecologists, midwifes | GPs, specialists in internal medicine (including rheumatologists and cardiologists), orthopaedist, pharmacies, county council drug committees | Neurologists, psychiatrists, gynaecologists, specialists in internal medicine, learned societies (neurology, epilepsy, psychiatry), county council drug committees | Cardiologists, specialists in internal medicine, GPs |
| UK | GPs, family planning clinics, nurses, gynaecologists, all pharmacists (community and hospital), midwives | GPs, retail pharmacists, chief pharmacists in secondary care, dentists in practice, dentists in mainstream hospitals, dental hospitals | GPs, pharmacists (community and hospital), secondary care | GPs, internal medicine specialists, cardiologists, chief pharmacists |
| | ||||
| Croatia | MAH | MAH | MAH | MAH |
| Denmark | NCA | MAH | MAH | MAH |
| Ireland | MAH | MAH | MAH | MAH |
| Italy | MAH | MAH | MAH | MAH |
| Netherlands | MAH | MAH | MAH | MAH |
| Norway | MAH | MAH | MAH | N/A |
| Spain | Learned societies of targeted HCPs | Learned societies of targeted HCPs | Learned societies of targeted HCPs | Learned societies of targeted HCPs |
| Sweden | MAH | MAH | MAH | MAH |
| UK | NCA | MAH | NCA | MAH |
CHCs combined hormonal contraceptives, COX cyclo-oxygenase, DHPC Direct Healthcare Professional Communication, GP general practitioner, HCP healthcare professional, MAH marketing authorisation holder, N/A not applicable, NCA national competent authority, PhV pharmacovigilance, VTE venous thromboembolism
Fig. 1Flowchart of number of healthcare professionals (HCPs) included per study aim. *272 responding HCPs were excluded: 135 had heard of Direct Healthcare Professional Communications (DHPCs), but had never seen one; 136 had never heard of DHPCs; and 1 skipped the question. †This safety issue was not included in the survey in Norway. GPs general practitioners
Fig. 2Total number of respondents and per profession by country
Fig. 3Familiarity with Direct Healthcare Professional Communications (DHPCs) by profession per country. 1Despite not being targeted, a few pharmacists from Spain completed the survey. 2In Sweden, pharmacists were not actively targeted and no pharmacists completed the survey. GPs general practitioners
Fig. 4Awareness of four specific safety issues by profession and P values for differences between professions within countries. P values in bold are considered statistically significant. 1Despite not being targeted, a few pharmacists from Spain completed the survey. 2In Sweden, pharmacists were not actively targeted and no pharmacists completed the survey. 3The ivabradine safety issue was not assessed in Norway. Card cardiologists, GPs general practitioners, Pharm pharmacists
| Familiarity with Direct Healthcare Professional Communications (DHPCs) was high among general practitioners (GPs), cardiologists, and pharmacists across Europe. |
| Cardiologists were more aware than GPs of the safety issue for a drug within their field of expertise (ivabradine) and less aware than GPs and pharmacists of safety issues of other drugs (contraceptives, diclofenac, and valproate), despite some of these relating to cardiovascular risks. |
| DHPCs were an important source for GPs, cardiologists, and pharmacists to become aware of specific safety issues, but other sources, such as websites or newsletters and medical journals, were also relevant. |