Although we observed a data mining signal for ALS with statins in FDA's AERS, retrospective analyses of 41 statin clinical trials did not reveal an increased incidence of ALS in subjects treated with a statin compared with placebo.
This overview highlights the need for strengthening the passive drug surveillance system from a pediatric perspective, as well as investing in more active surveillance systems. Drug safety initiatives to better capture risk information in order to balance the risk/benefit of drug use in children.
Introduction
On 4 February, 2020, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services declared a public health emergency related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and on 27 March, 2020 declared circumstances existed to justify the authorization of the emergency use of drug and biological products (hereafter, “drugs”) for COVID-19. At the outset of the pandemic with uncertainty relating to the virus, many drugs were being used to treat or prevent COVID-19, resulting in the US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) need to initiate heightened surveillance across these drugs.
Objective
We aimed to describe the FDA’s approach to monitoring the safety of drugs to treat or prevent COVID-19 across multiple data sources and the subsequent actions taken by the FDA to protect public health.
Methods
The FDA conducted surveillance of adverse event and medication error data using the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System, biomedical literature, FDA-American College of Medical Toxicology COVID-19 Toxicology Investigators Consortium Pharmacovigilance Project Sub-registry, and the American Association of Poison Control Centers National Poison Data System.
Results
From 4 February, 2020, through 31 January, 2022, we identified 22,944 unique adverse event cases worldwide and 1052 unique medication error cases domestically with drugs to treat or prevent COVID-19. These were from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (22,219), biomedical literature (1107), FDA-American College of Medical Toxicology COVID-19 Toxicology Investigator’s Consortium Sub-registry (638), and the National Poison Data System (32), resulting in the detection of several important safety issues.
Conclusions
Safety surveillance using near real-time data was critical during the COVID-19 pandemic because the FDA monitored an unprecedented number of drugs to treat or prevent COVID-19. Additionally, the pandemic prompted the FDA to accelerate innovation, forging new collaborations and leveraging data sources to conduct safety surveillance to respond to the pandemic.
Purpose
We validated an algorithm to detect frequency errors in computerized healthcare data and estimated the incidence of these errors in an integrated healthcare system.
Methods
We applied Sentinel System analytic tools on the electronic health records of Kaiser Permanente, Northern California, January 1, 2010, through May 30, 2015,to identify rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients with new use of methotrexate (365‐day baseline period). We identified potential methotrexate frequency errors using ICD‐9 code 995.20 (adverse drug event), Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) code 96409 for injection of leucovorin and prescription refill patterns. We performed chart review to confirm the frequency errors, assessed performance for detecting frequency errors, and estimated the incidence of chart‐confirmed errors.
Results
The study included 24,529 methotrexate dispensings among 3,668 RA patients. Among these, 722 (3%) had one dispensing and 23,807 (97.1%) had ≥2 dispensings during 1‐year follow‐up period. We flagged 653 (2.7%) with a potential medication error (46 with one dispensing and 607 with ≥2 dispensings). We sampled 94 for chart review, and confirmed three methotrexate errors. All three confirmed frequency errors involved a first methotrexate dispensing followed by injected rescue therapy, leucovorin, (positive predictive value, 60%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 15‐95%). No potential errors were found among patients with ≥2 dispensings. We estimated the frequency error incidence among one methotrexate dispensing to be 0.4% (95%CI, 0.1% to 1.2%).
Conclusion
Rescue therapy is a specific indicator of methotrexate overdose among first methotrexate dispensings. This method is generalizable to other medications with serious adverse events treated with antidotes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.