| Literature DB >> 30871458 |
Leihong Wu1, Taylor Ingle1, Zhichao Liu1, Anna Zhao-Wong2, Stephen Harris1, Shraddha Thakkar1, Guangxu Zhou1, Junshuang Yang1, Joshua Xu1, Darshan Mehta1, Weigong Ge1, Weida Tong3, Hong Fang4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) are of great public health concern. FDA-approved drug labeling summarizes ADRs of a drug product mainly in three sections, i.e., Boxed Warning (BW), Warnings and Precautions (WP), and Adverse Reactions (AR), where the severity of ADRs are intended to decrease in the order of BW > WP > AR. Several reported studies have extracted ADRs from labeling documents, but most, if not all, did not discriminate the severity of the ADRs by the different labeling sections. Such a practice could overstate or underestimate the impact of certain ADRs to the public health. In this study, we applied the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities (MedDRA) to drug labeling and systematically analyzed and compared the ADRs from the three labeling sections with a specific emphasis on analyzing serious ADRs presented in BW, which is of most drug safety concern.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse drug reactions; Boxed Warning; Data mining; Drug labeling; Drug safety; MedDRA; Standard terminology; Structured product labeling
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30871458 PMCID: PMC6419320 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-019-2628-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Occurrence of MedDRA terms in three ADR related labeling sections
| ADR Section Name | # Drugs | # Low Level Terms* | # Preferred Terms* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boxed Warning (BW) | 367 | 593 ( | 460 ( |
| Warnings and Precautions (WP) | 1148 | 3206 ( | 2023 (53.0 |
| Adverse Reactions (AR) | 1152 | 5300 ( | 2961 ( |
| Whole Labeling Document | 1164 | 7287 ( | 3819 ( |
Total number of LLTs is 75,818 and PTs is 21920 in MedDRA, version 19.0
*Only ADR related 22 disorder SOCs was investigated
Fig. 1Top 20 PTs observed in BOXED WARNING (BW), WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS (WP), and ADVERSE REACTIONS (AR) sections among labeling of 1164 drugs. Overlapped PTs between BW and WP/AR sections are highlighted as follows: 6 PTs overlapped between BW and WP (red stars), 8 PTs overlapped between WP and AR (green stars), only 1 PT (infection) overlapped between BW, WP and AR
Fig. 2Number of PTs and Drugs involved in each SOC. SOCs were sorted by their involved drugs. Bars represent the number of Drugs and PTs involved in each SOC, respectively. Blue starred SOCs represent the PTs in these SOCs that are significantly enriched in BW section (p-value < 0.05, Fisher’s exact test)
Fig. 3Clustering analysis results of drug ATC/MedDRA PT association. Only sADRs in BW section were analyzed. X-axis corresponds to drug ATC groups and Y-axis corresponds to MedDRA PTs. We analyzed MedDRA PTs and ATCs that were found to be associated with at least 5 drugs shown in the analysis. Drug classes and SOCs are represented by different colors. For example, PTs from SOC Hepat are green and can be identified in the Y-axis, whereas drugs from nervous system (N) are purple and can be identified at the X-axis
Fig. 4PT occurrence in cluster J05 (antivirals for systemic use) drugs. Only PTs in Fig. 3(b) cluster were further analyzed and were found to belong to two SOCs (Hepatobiliary disorders and Infections and infestations). It is noted that PTs with ‘*’ (Hepatitis D and Hepatitis A) include stop words (A and D), which are removed in Oracle Text queries, so they were queried and resulted the same as “Hepatitis”