[1] 
pharmakon-a drug or medicine
vigilans-watchful or careful
- The monitoring, detection, evaluation and responding to drug safety hazards in humans during pre’marketing development and post-marketing (Shakir and Lezton 2002)
- WHO: The science and activities relating to the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention of adverse effects or any other drug-related problem (Edwards 2002)
Safety monitoring and evaluation throughout whole life-cycle of a product Encompasses non-clinical, clinical, post-marketing safety data Evaluation requires a holistic approach Signals detected during development do not necessarily kill the productWhy pharmacovigilance?
- Limited value of animal experiments in predicting human safety
- Clinical trials are limited in time and number of patients; are ‘artificial’. Patients are selected (adults, no other drugs, no other diseases). Not representative of real-life use.
- Rare or delayed serious reactions are likely to remain unnoticed
- Ethical Requirements
- Legal Requirements
- Assess risk benefit
Functions of pharmacovigilance
(WHO Guidelines, 2000)
- Detection and study of adverse reactions
- Measurement of risk
- Measurement of effectiveness
- Benefit & harm evaluation
- Dissemination of information, education
Ø Early warning Ø Rational and safe use of medicines CORPORATE PHARMACOVIGILANCE- SCOPE
- Identify common and rare side effects
- Assess risk benefit Processing and regulatory submission of SAEs
- Processing and regulatory submission of SAEs
- Communications of SAEs reported
- Causality assessment of SAEs reported in any part of world
- Monitoring compliance of SAE processing and reporting
- Generation of PSURs
Rationale for pharmacovigilanceInformation obtained prior to first marketing is inadequate to cover all aspects of drug safety:
- tests in animals are insufficiently predictive of human safety,
- in clinical trials patients are selected and limited in number,
- conditions of use in trials differ from those in clinical practice,
- duration of trials is limited
- Information about rare but serious adverse reactions, chronic toxicity, use in special groups (such as children, the elderly or pregnant women) or drug interactions is often not available.
- Prevents Disasters
- Builds up customer confidence
- Ensures Compliance and retention
- Builds brand image
Pharmacovigilance is needed in every country, because there are differences between countries in the occurrence of adverse drug reactions because of differences in:
- drug production
- distribution and use (e.g. indications, dose, availability)
- genetics, diet, traditions of the people
- pharmaceutical quality and composition (excipients) of locally produced pharmaceutical products
- the use of non-orthodox drugs (e.g. herbal remedies) which may pose special toxicological problems, when used alone or in combination with other drugs.