以患者为中心的药物警戒:遗传性出血性疾病团体的优先行动。

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q2 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety Pub Date : 2023-02-25 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/20420986221146418
Fiona Robinson, Sonji Wilkes, Nathan Schaefer, Miriam Goldstein, Michelle Rice, Johanna Gray, Sharon Meyers, Leonard A Valentino
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引用次数: 0

摘要

药物警戒是监测药品效果及其安全性的科学和实践,是参与药品和器械开发、生产、监管、分销、处方和使用的所有利益相关者的责任。患者是受安全问题影响最大的利益相关者,也是安全问题的最大信息来源。然而,患者在药物警戒的设计和执行过程中发挥核心作用和领导作用的情况并不多见。遗传性出血性疾病社区的患者组织是最成熟、最有能力的组织之一,尤其是在罕见疾病领域。在本综述中,美国血友病联合会(HFA)和全美血友病基金会(NHF)这两个最大的出血性疾病患者组织就所有利益相关者为改善药物警戒而需采取的优先行动发表了见解。最近,引起安全问题的事件不断增加,治疗领域正处于前所未有的扩张期,这一切都表明,在药品开发和销售过程中,患者的安全和福祉至关重要。开发这些产品的制药和生物医学公司必须证明这些产品是有效的,安全风险是有限或可控的,监管机构才能批准其使用和销售。在产品获得批准并在人们的日常生活中使用后,必须继续收集有关任何负面副作用或不良事件的信息;这就是所谓的药物警戒。美国食品药品管理局等监管机构、销售和分销产品的公司以及开具处方的医疗保健专业人员都必须参与收集、报告、分析和交流这些信息。对药物或器械的益处和危害最了解的第一手资料是使用这些药物或器械的患者。他们有重要的责任学习如何识别不良事件、如何报告不良事件,并随时从药物警戒网络的其他合作伙伴那里了解有关产品的任何消息。这些合作伙伴有重要责任向患者提供清晰易懂的信息,告知他们任何新发现的安全性问题。最近,遗传性出血性疾病患者群体遇到了产品安全问题沟通不畅的问题,促使美国两个大型患者组织--全美血友病基金会和美国血友病联合会--与所有药物警戒网络合作伙伴举行了一次安全峰会。他们共同提出了改进产品安全信息收集和交流的建议,以便患者在使用药物和器械时能及时做出明智的决定。本文结合药物警戒的工作原理和社区遇到的一些挑战,介绍了这些建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Patient-centered pharmacovigilance: priority actions from the inherited bleeding disorders community.

Pharmacovigilance, the science and practice of monitoring the effects of medicinals and their safety, is the responsibility of all stakeholders involved in the development, manufacture, regulation, distribution, prescription, and use of drugs and devices. The patient is the stakeholder most impacted by and the greatest source of information on safety issues. It is rare, however, for the patient to take a central role and exert leadership in the design and execution of pharmacovigilance. Patient organizations in the inherited bleeding disorders community are among the most established and empowered, particularly in the rare disorders. In this review, two of the largest bleeding disorders patient organizations, Hemophilia Federation of America (HFA) and National Hemophilia Foundation (NHF), offer insights into the priority actions required of all stakeholders to improve pharmacovigilance. The recent and ongoing increase in incidents raising safety concerns and a therapeutic landscape on the cusp of unprecedented expansion heighten the urgency of a recommitment to the primacy of patient safety and well-being in drug development and distribution.

Plain language summary: Patients at the center of product safety Every medical device and therapeutic product has potential benefits and harms. The pharmaceutical and biomedical companies that develop them must demonstrate that they are effective, and the safety risks are limited or manageable, for regulators to approve them for use and sale. After the product has been approved and people are using it in their daily lives, it is important to continue to collect information about any negative side effects or adverse events; this is called pharmacovigilance. Regulators, like the United States (US) Food and Drug Administration, the companies that sell and distribute the products, and healthcare professionals who prescribe them are all required to participate in collecting, reporting, analyzing, and communicating this information. The people with the most firsthand knowledge of the benefits and harms of the drug or device are the patients who use them. They have an important responsibility to learn how to recognize adverse events, how to report them, and to stay informed of any news about the product from the other partners in the pharmacovigilance network. Those partners have a crucial responsibility to provide clear, easy-to-understand information to patients about any new safety concerns that come to light. The community of people with inherited bleeding disorders has recently encountered problems with poor communication of product safety issues, prompting two large US patient organizations, National Hemophilia Foundation and Hemophilia Federation of America, to hold a Safety Summit with all the pharmacovigilance network partners. Together they developed recommendations to improve the collection and communication of information about product safety so that patients can make well-informed, timely decisions about their use of drugs and devices. This article presents these recommendations in the context of how pharmacovigilance is supposed to work and some of the challenges encountered by the community.

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来源期刊
Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety
Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety Medicine-Pharmacology (medical)
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
4.50%
发文量
31
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety delivers the highest quality peer-reviewed articles, reviews, and scholarly comment on pioneering efforts and innovative studies pertaining to the safe use of drugs in patients. The journal has a strong clinical and pharmacological focus and is aimed at clinicians and researchers in drug safety, providing a forum in print and online for publishing the highest quality articles in this area. The editors welcome articles of current interest on research across all areas of drug safety, including therapeutic drug monitoring, pharmacoepidemiology, adverse drug reactions, drug interactions, pharmacokinetics, pharmacovigilance, medication/prescribing errors, risk management, ethics and regulation.
期刊最新文献
Investigating the impact of a pharmacist intervention on inappropriate prescribing practices at hospital admission and discharge in older patients: a secondary outcome analysis from a randomized controlled trial. Determining the optimum dose of remifentanil in combination with propofol for total intravenous anaesthesia in hysteroscopy under Narcotrend and SPI monitoring. The evolution of the Pharmacovigilance department in the pharmaceutical industry: results of an Italian national survey. Comparison of a single intravenous infusion of alfentanil or sufentanil combined with target-controlled infusion of propofol for daytime hysteroscopy: a randomized clinical trial. Governance of artificial intelligence and machine learning in pharmacovigilance: what works today and what more is needed?
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