| Literature DB >> 35407541 |
Laura Weisbach1,2, Anna K Schuster1,2, Michael Hartmann2, Martin F Fromm3, Renke Maas3, Katrin Farker1,2.
Abstract
Liver disease is a common condition worldwide that can cause alterations in drug disposition and susceptibility to drug toxicities, with increased risk of adverse drug reactions. European Summaries of Product Characteristics (SmPCs) and United States Prescribing Information (US PI) should therefore be comprehensible to prescribers regarding their liver-associated contraindications to ensure safe prescribing. This study aimed to evaluate the ambiguity of terminology used in communicating liver-associated absolute contraindications in SmPCs/PI of commonly prescribed drugs in four major drug markets (Germany, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States) by assigning wordings to different categories and analyzing their clinical comprehensibility. For US PI, 79% did not contain liver-related contraindications, compared to 2, 13, and 6% of German, Swiss, and British SmPCs, respectively. Study findings indicate that out of 228 examined SmPCs/PI containing liver-related contraindications, 77, 79, 76, and 52% contained unclear wording in the German, Swiss, British, and American drug market, respectively. Only 40% (German), 52% (Swiss), 39% (British), and 29% (American) of SmPCs/PI included terms with explicit wording. Including more precise statements in SmPCs/PI based on laboratory parameters (such as albumin) or scores (e.g., the Child-Pugh score) to objectify the severity of liver disease may improve the clarity of SmPCs/PI and the safety of drug prescription.Entities:
Keywords: PI; SmPC; drug contraindications; drug market; liver disease; liver-related contraindications; medication safety; prescribing information
Year: 2022 PMID: 35407541 PMCID: PMC9000103 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11071933
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Selection of drugs for analysis.
Figure 2Selection of SmPCs/PI for analysis. References: TOP 10 (predicted 2021) [24], TOP 50 (2020) [25], TOP 20 generics manufacturers in Germany (2016–2018) [26], AVR [16].
Figure 3Overlap of active ingredients in the four drug markets.
Category names and terms that were assigned to the respective categories. English terms only. Complete list (German and English terms) available in Supplementary Table S2.
| Category | Terms |
|---|---|
| hepatic impairment | hepatic dysfunction, liver dysfunction, impairment of liver function, liver function abnormality, hepatic function disorder, decompensated hepatic function, impaired hepatic function, impairment of hepatic function |
| liver disease | hepatic disease, hepatic damage |
| liver insufficiency | hepatic insufficiency |
| liver cirrhosis | cirrhosis, biliary cirrhosis, hepatic cirrhosis |
| transaminases | serum transaminases |
| porphyria | no additional terms |
| Child–Pugh | Child–Pugh class/score |
| precoma/coma | hepatic coma, hepatic encephalopathy, precomatose states |
| jaundice | no additional terms |
| hepatic failure | no additional terms |
| hepatitis | no additional terms |
| ascites | no additional terms |
| albumin | serum albumin |
Categories evaluated for explicitness of terms.
| Grade I: |
“albumin”, which refers to laboratory parameters with a clearly defined laboratory value “ ascites”, defined symptom (liver-associated diagnostics and therapy, see Updated S2k-Guideline “Complications of liver cirrhosis” [ “Child–Pugh”, defined score for liver cirrhosis [ “ hepatitis”, defined disease [ “ jaundice”, defined symptom [ “ liver cirrhosis”, defined disease [ “ porphyria”, defined disease [ |
| Grade II: |
“coma/precoma”, partly defined by West-Haven-Criteria, but precomatose states are not clearly defined [ “liver disease”, broad spectrum of diseases, that can be defined but no reference for inclusion or exclusion of certain conditions, as this term may address functional (i.e., metabolic and pharmacokinetic) aspects as well as the organ vulnerability to toxic effects [ “transaminases”, refers to laboratory parameters of aspartate transaminase (AST) and alanine transaminase (ALT), but sometimes no defined values noted |
| Grade III: |
“hepatic impairment”, no definition “hepatic failure”, attempts of definition, but may contain different types of liver failure, that are not referred to [ “liver insufficiency”, no clear definition [ |
Figure 4(A) Each drug market’s portion of the total amount of examined SmPCs/PI. (B) Each drug market’s portion of all examined SmPCs/PI without liver-related contraindications.
Total number of SmPCs/PI (n = 280) divided into those containing liver-associated contra-indications (n = 228) and those not containing liver-associated contraindications (n = 52) in the four chosen drug markets.
| Country | Number of Examined SmPCs/PI/Drugs in Each Country | SmPCs/PI Containing | SmPCs/PI without Liver-Related Contraindications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | 78 | 77 (99%) | 1 (1%) |
| Switzerland | 70 | 63 (90%) | 7 (10%) |
| United Kingdom | 70 | 67 (96%) | 3 (4%) |
| United States | 62 | 21 (34%) 1 | 41 (66%) 1 |
| Total number of SmPCs/PI | 280 2 | 228 (81%) | 52 (19%) |
1 The difference in the amount of SmPCs/PI containing/not containing liver-related contraindications in the US compared to other drug markets is explained in the text. 2 The portion of the total number of examined SmPCs/PI for each country: Germany 28%, Switzerland 25%, United Kingdom 25%, United States 22% (see also Figure 4A).
Figure 5Portion of SmPCs/PI containing and without liver-related contraindications. (A) In the four chosen drug markets, (B) in Germany, (C) in Switzerland, (D) in the United Kingdom, and (E) in the United States.
Figure 6Number of SmPCs/PI with terms in assigned categories divided by drug markets.
Figure 7Portion of SmPCs/PI evaluated for explicitness of terms in all drug markets.
Combinations of ambiguous and more clearly defined terms.
| Term | Disease/Laboratory | Original Term in SmPC/PI |
|---|---|---|
| Severe hepatic impairment | Liver cirrhosis, Child–Pugh score C | Severe hepatic dysfunction (serum albumin < 25 g/L or Child–Pugh score ≥ 10) * |
| Severe hepatic impairment | Acute hepatitis | Patients with severe hepatic impairment (for example acute hepatitis) * |
| Severe hepatic impairment | Serum Albumin < 25 g/L | Severe hepatic dysfunction (serum albumin < 25 g/L or Child–Pugh score ≥ 10) * |
| Severe hepatic impairment | Coma/Precoma hepaticum | Severe hepatic impairment with coma/precoma hepaticum * |
| Severe hepatic insufficiency | Liver cirrhosis, Child–Pugh score C | Patients with severe hepatic insufficiency (Child–Pugh Class C) |
| Moderate hepatic impairment | Liver cirrhosis, Child–Pugh score B | Patients with moderate or severe hepatic impairment (Childs-Pugh categories B and C) |
* Translated term from German to English. The original term can be found in Supplementary Table S3 “Translation of German phrases used in the German or Swiss SmPCs translated into English”.