Unintended impact of pharmacovigilance regulatory interventions: A systematic review

Author:

Lasys Tomas1ORCID,Santa‐Ana‐Tellez Yared1ORCID,Siiskonen Satu J.1ORCID,Groenwold Rolf H. H.2ORCID,Gardarsdottir Helga134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Clinical Pharmacology, Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences (UIPS) Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

2. Department of Clinical Epidemiology Leiden University Medical Centre Leiden The Netherlands

3. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Health Sciences University of Iceland Reykjavik Iceland

4. Department of Clinical Pharmacy University Medical Centre Utrecht Utrecht The Netherlands

Abstract

AimsStudies assessing the impact of pharmacovigilance regulatory interventions often focus on the expected (or intended) outcomes, while any possible unintended impact may be overlooked. The update of the Good Pharmacovigilance Practice guideline in 2017 elaborated on impact assessment, emphasizing the need also to assess possible unintended impact. This systematic literature review investigated how often the unintended impact of regulatory interventions was considered in publications of studies investigating pharmacovigilance regulatory interventions in Europe.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review of the literature on MEDLINE and EMBASE from 1 January 2012 to 28 February 2022 to identify publications that investigated the impact of regulatory interventions in Europe. The primary outcome of the study was the number of publications reporting assessments of unintended impact. In addition, we studied the characteristics of these publications, including the type of outcomes assessed, the analytical methods applied and the type of data used.ResultsIn total, 96 publications were included in the analysis. The unintended impact of pharmacovigilance regulatory interventions was investigated in 23 of 96 publications (24%). The drug classes most frequently studied in the publications assessing unintended impact of regulatory interventions were oral glucose‐lowering drugs (n = 6, 26%), opioids (n = 4, 17%), antidepressants (n = 4, 17%) and antipsychotics (n = 3, 13%). The reported methods to assess the unintended impact were interrupted time series (n = 10, 43%) and descriptive statistics with or without significance testing (n = 2 [9%] and n = 9 [39%], respectively). The outcomes selected for unintended impact assessments included the use of other drugs (n = 16, 70%), health outcomes (n = 8, 35%) and behavioural changes (n = 4, 17%). Most of the publications reported on the use of electronic health record databases (n = 13, 57%) or claims databases (n = 13, 57%), while registries were used in 4 publications (17%).ConclusionThe unintended impact of pharmacovigilance regulatory interventions was reported in only a quarter of identified publications. There was no apparent increase in attention to unintended impact assessments after the update of the Good Pharmacovigilance Practice guidelines.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

Reference48 articles.

1. Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 520/2012 of 19 June 2012 on the performance of pharmacovigilance activities provided for in Regulation (EC) No 726/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council and Directive 2001/83/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council.Official Journal of the European Union.2012;L159/5.

2. European Medicines Agency.Good pharmacovigilance practices. Published online 17 September2018. Accessed June 30 2022.https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/human‐regulatory/post‐authorisation/pharmacovigilance/good‐pharmacovigilance‐practices

3. Do drug‐related safety warnings have the expected impact on drug therapy? A systematic review

4. Measuring the impact of medicines regulatory interventions - Systematic review and methodological considerations

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