| Literature DB >> 29520645 |
Rodrigo Postigo1, Sabine Brosch2, Jim Slattery2, Anja van Haren3, Jean-Michel Dogné4, Xavier Kurz2, Gianmario Candore2, Francois Domergue2, Peter Arlett2.
Abstract
The analysis of safety data from spontaneous reporting systems has a proven value for the detection and analysis of the risks of medicines following their placement on the market and use in medical practice. EudraVigilance is the pharmacovigilance database to manage the collection and analysis of suspected adverse reactions to medicines authorised in the European Economic Area. EudraVigilance first operated in December 2001, with access to the database being governed by the EudraVigilance access policy. We performed a literature search including data up to December 2016 to demonstrate how the data from EudraVigilance has been used in scientific publications. We describe the results, including by type of publication, research topics and drugs involved. In 50% of the publications, the data are used to describe safety issues, in 44% to analyse methodologies used in pharmacovigilance activities and in 6% to support clinical perspectives. We also outline a description of the use of the database by the European Union regulatory network. Driven by the full implementation of the 2010 pharmacovigilance legislation, EudraVigilance has undergone further enhancements together with a major revision of its access policy, taking into account the use of the new individual case safety report standard developed by the International Council for Harmonization of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use and the International Organization for Standardization. The aim of the broadened access is to facilitate more effective safety monitoring of authorised medicines, to make more data available for research and to provide better access to information on suspected adverse reactions for healthcare professionals and patients. In November 2017, the new full functionalities of EudraVigilance were launched, including the extensive web access to data on suspected adverse drug reactions and the possibilities for academic research institutions to request a more extensive dataset for the purposes of health research. The main objective of this article is to describe the new access to the database together with the opportunities that this new access can bring for research. It is intended to promote an appropriate use of the data to support the safe and effective use of medicines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29520645 PMCID: PMC5990579 DOI: 10.1007/s40264-018-0647-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Saf ISSN: 0114-5916 Impact factor: 5.606
Fig. 1Publications using EudraVigilance data up to 31 December, 2016, classified per country of author and type of publication (as per the classification stated in EMBASE). Absolute numbers. EMA European Medicines Agency
Fig. 2Publications per year and the main classification of the publications using EudraVigilance data up to 31 December, 2016. Absolute numbers
Fig. 3Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) code classification of the drugs analysed in the publications using EudraVigilance data to describe safety issues up to 31 December, 2016. Absolute numbers. excl excluding
Fig. 4MedDRA® System Organ Class distribution for the specific safety issues described in the publications using EudraVigilance data up to 31 December, 2016. Absolute numbers. incl including
Fig. 5Classification of the pharmacovigilance topics analysed using EudraVigilance data up to 31 December, 2016. Absolute numbers. ADRs adverse drug reactions
Level of EudraVigilance access provided by stakeholder group
| Group | Stakeholder | Type of cases | Access given (summary) | Access method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Medicines regulatory authorities in EEA Member States, the European Commission and the EMA | All cases | Complete access (Level 3—272 data fields) | EVWEBa and EVDASb |
| II | Healthcare professionals and the public | Spontaneousc | Aggregated data | ADR website |
| III | Marketing authorisation holders | EVPMd cases | Aggregated data with statistical output (eRMR) | EVDAS |
| EVPM cases containing suspect/interacting substances related to their products | XML file and ICSR form (Level 2A—228 data fields) | EVWEB | ||
| EVPM cases previously submitted by the specific marketing authorisation holders and medical literature monitoring cases | Complete access (Level 3—272 data fields) | EVWEB | ||
| IV | Research organisations | EVPM cases | Level 2A—228 data fields | Research request submission to the EMA |
| V | WHO-UMC | EVPM cases | XML file (level 2C—134 data fields) | Data transfer between EMA and WHO-UMC |
| VI | Medicines regulatory agencies in third countries | EVPM cases | Level 2C—134 data fields. | Request submission to the EMA |
ADR adverse drug reaction, EEA European Economic Area, EDBMS EudraVigilance database management system, EMA European Medicines Agency, eRMR electronic reaction monitoring report, EVDAS EudraVigilance data analysis system, EVPM EudraVigilance post-authorisation module, EVWEB EudraVigilance web application, ICSR individual case safety report, WHO-UMC World Health Organization-Uppsala Monitoring Centre
aThe EVWEB is the interface to the EDBMS and allows registered users to create, send and view ICSRs
bThe EVDAS supports European Union pharmacovigilance safety monitoring activities with the main focus on signal detection and evaluation of ICSRs
cA spontaneous report is an unsolicited communication by a healthcare professional, or consumer to a competent authority, marketing authorisation holder or other organisation (e.g. regional pharmacovigilance centre, poison control centre) that describes one or more suspected adverse reactions in a patient who was given one or more medicinal products. It does not derive from a study or any organised data collection system [31]. Spontaneous reports are identified in the database by the mandatory field ‘type of report’ provided by the senders at the time of the ICSR submission
dThe EVPM includes cases with type of report ‘spontaneous’, ‘other’ and ‘not available to sender (unknown)’ plus reports from studies (including ‘individual patient use’ and ‘other study’)
Fig. 6Access to Level 1 EudraVigilance data by research organisations. ADR adverse drug reaction, ICSR individual case safety report
Fig. 7Access to Level 2A EudraVigilance data by research organisations. EMA European Medicines Agency
Adverse drug reaction website: additional measures for data protection
| Measures |
| The information provided in the 53 data elements (level 1 access) individually or in combination would not lead to the identification of individual patients, for instance, date of birth, or free text fields are not provided |
| Within the details of the individual cases, the country where the reaction occurred is not provided. The ‘country’ data field is displayed as EEA or non-EEA. This is to prevent the identification of patients where there are a small number of cases per country |
| The product name for non-centrally authorised medicinal products is replaced by the substance name. Product names can potentially lead to the identification of the country where the reaction occurred |
| The Worldwide Case Identification Number is replaced by the EV local report number as the country code is normally included in the Worldwide Case Identification Number |
| The sender organisation is displayed as ‘EEA regulator’ for cases submitted by regulatory authorities from the EEA to avoid the identification of the country |
| A threshold is applied if the number of individual cases available for a specific country is less or equal to 3. In this instance, the total number of cases for the specific country is not provided to reduce the risk of patient or reporter identification |
EEA European Economic Area, EV EudraVigilance
| New EudraVigilance functionalities and the increased level of access facilitate more effective monitoring of the safety of medicines. Six different stakeholder groups with different levels of access have been defined |
| Since November 2017, academic research institutions have the possibility to request extended access to EudraVigilance data, opening more possibilities for scientific and medical research |
| Scientific publications using EudraVigilance data have increased since 2010 and analyse a wide range of safety issues, medicinal products, therapeutics areas, and pharmacovigilance topics and methods |