12-16-031 Safety Review for Plan B Daniel Davis, MD, MPH Division of Reproductive/Urologic Drugs.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Plan B ® Actual Use and Behavior Studies NDA NDAC & ACRHD Joint Meeting December 16, 2003 Jin Chen, MD, PhD Division of OTC Drug Products NDAC &
Advertisements

Importance of Vaccine Safety Decreases in disease risks and increased attention on vaccine risks Public confidence in vaccine safety is critical Low tolerance.
Session I, Slide #11 Levonorgestrel (LNG) Emergency Contraceptive Pills Session I: Characteristics of LNG Emergency Contraceptive Pills.
Nonprescription Simvastatin in the United Kingdom Michael L. Koenig, Ph.D. Interdisciplinary Scientist Division of Over-the-Counter Drug Products Center.
Monitoring Safety of Rotavirus Vaccines David Martin, MD, MPH CBER Office of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, FDA For presentation at the Vaccines and Related.
Guidance for Industry Establishing Pregnancy Registries Pregnancy Registry Working Group Pregnancy Labeling Taskforce March, 2000 Evelyn M. Rodriguez M.D.,
+ Drug Development and Review Process. + Objectives Learn the processes involved in drug discovery and development Define the phases involved in FDA drug.
Interpreting Adverse Signals in Diabetes Drug Development Programs Featured Article: Clifford J. Bailey, Ph.D. Diabetes Care Volume 36: 1-9 July, 2013.
Postmarketing Risk Assessment of Drug Products Division of Drug Risk Evaluation Office of Drug Safety Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.
1 Alvimopan RiskMAP Joyce Weaver, Pharm.D., BCPS Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology.
Joint NDAC/PAC meeting October 18, 2007 OTC Cold and Cough Products: Use in Children Advisory Committee Meeting October 18, 2007 Joel Schiffenbauer, MD.
INVESTIGATIONAL DRUG SERVICES IN THE HOSPITAL Sheree Miller, Pharm.D. University of Washington Medical Center
Prescription Drug Abuse Sharon Hertz, M.D. Medical Officer Division of Anesthetic, Critical Care and Addiction Drug Products Food and Drug Administration.
AA-7-1 René Belder, MD Executive Director Clinical Development and Life Cycle Management Cardiovascular / Metabolics 7asdf.
An Update on NSAID Labeling and Data Review DSaRM Advisory Committee February 10, 2006 Sharon Hertz, M.D. Deputy Director Division of Anesthesia, Analgesia,
CASTRO VALLEY ADULT AND CAREER EDUCATION CMA PROGRAM FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION.
1 One Year Post Exclusivity Adverse Event Review: Ofloxacin Ophthalmic Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting September 15, 2004 Hari Cheryl Sachs, MD, FAAP.
Emergency contraception (MAP) without a medical prescription : luxury or necessity ? E. Aubény French Association for Contraception Paris - France.
Overview of Issues for Psychopharmacological Drugs Advisory Committee June 16, 2003 WBC Monitoring for Clozapine Judith A. Racoosin, MD, MPH Safety Team.
ADVERSE EFFECTS OF DRUGS Phase II May Adverse Drug Reaction An adverse reaction to a drug is a harmful or unintended response. ADRs are claimed.
Postmarketing Safety Assessment of Osteonecrosis of the Jaw Pamidronate & Zoledronic Acid Division of Drug Risk Evaluation Office of Drug Safety FDA Carol.
PROPRIETARY NAME EVALUATION AT FDA Jerry Phillips, RPh Associate Director for Medication Error Prevention Office of Drug Safety December 4, 2003.
Reproductive Health Drugs, Pregnancy Labeling Subcommittee Meeting March 28-29, 2000 Holli A. Hamilton, M.D., M.P.H. Pregnancy Labeling Team Office of.
1 Non-Sedating Antihistamines Rx-to-OTC Switch NDAC & PADAC Joint Meeting May 11, 2001 François Nader, MD Senior Vice-President Medical & Regulatory Affairs,
DRAFT SLIDES FOR NDA ADVISORY COMMITTEE PRESENATIONS.
Placebo-Controls in Short-Term Clinical Trials of Hypertension Sana Al-Khatib, MD, MHS Assistant Professor of Medicine Division of Cardiology Duke University.
Joint Meeting of Anti-Infective Drugs & Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committees December 14-15, 2006 Ketek  (telithromycin) Regulatory History.
1Presentation Name Pre-Marketing Safety Assessment: The Safety Review Guidance Armando Oliva, M.D. Associate Director for Policy Office of New Drugs.
1 One Year Post Exclusivity Adverse Event Review: Fexofenadine Pediatric Subcommittee of the Anti-infective Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting June 9, 2004.
Levonorgestrel (LNG) Emergency Contraceptive Pills Session I: Characteristics of LNG Emergency Contraceptive Pills.
DEVELOPING EVIDENCE ON VACCINE SAFETY Susan S. Ellenberg, Ph.D. Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics U Penn School of Medicine Global Vaccines.
Joint Dermatologic and Ophthalmic Drugs & Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee February 26 & 27, 2004 RISK MANAGEMENT OPTIONS FOR PREGNANCY.
1 Lotronex Postmarketing Experience Ann Corken Mackey, R.Ph., M.P.H. Allen Brinker, M.D., M.S. Zili Li, M.D., M.P.H., formerly of ODS Office of Drug Safety.
METHODS TO STUDY DRUG SAFETY PROBLEMS animal experiments clinical trials epidemiological methods –spontaneous reporting case reports case series –Post-Marketing.
VIOXX ™ Gastrointestinal Outcome Research (VIGOR) Arthritis Advisory Committee Meeting February 8, 2001 Lourdes Villalba, M.D. DAAODP, CDER, FDA.
Orlistat 60 mg Joint Meeting Nonprescription Drugs and Endocrinologic and Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committees January 23, 2006 Andrea Leonard-Segal, M.D.
Mevacor 20 mg Joint Meeting Nonprescription Drugs and Endocrinologic and Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committees December 13, 2007 Andrea Leonard-Segal, M.D.
Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee May 18-19, Overview of Drug Safety Challenges Gerald J. Dal Pan, MD, MHS Director Division of.
DIVISION OF REPRODUCTIVE AND UROLOGIC PRODUCTS Physician Labeling Rule Lisa Soule, M.D.
1 One Year Post Exclusivity Adverse Event Review: Carboplatin Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting November 18, 2005 Susan McCune, M.D. Medical Officer.
1 Vaccines and Related Biologic Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) May 16, 2007 FluMist ® Influenza Virus Vaccine Live, Intranasal Safety and Effectiveness.
1 QTc and Quinolones: recent regulatory actions Joyce Korvick M.D., M.P.H. Office of Drug Evaluation IV Division of Special Pathogens FDA.
Cardiovascular Health Research Unit, Seattle, WA IOM recommendations on drug safety: relevance for vaccines? Bruce M Psaty, MD, PhD.
Focus on Nursing Pharmacology
FDA1 Overview of Postmarketing Safety Surveillance in FDA (For Drugs and Biologics) Min Chen, M.S., R.Ph. Min Chen, M.S., R.Ph. Associate Director Division.
General Regulatory Issues in the Development of Drugs Intended for Treatment of Chronic Illness Sharon Hertz, M.D. Medical Officer Division of Anesthetic,
July 15, Postmarketing Safety Evaluation of Approved Drugs and Risk Management Victor F. C. Raczkowski, MD, MS Director, Office of Drug Safety July.
1 One Year Post Exclusivity Adverse Event Review: Sumatriptan Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting November 18, 2005 Susan McCune, M.D. Medical Officer.
SNDA Letrozole (Femara®) Indication: First-line therapy in post- menopausal women with advanced breast cancer. Prior approval: Second-line therapy.
Postmarketing Pharmacovigilance Practice at FDA Lanh Green, Pharm.D., M.P.H. Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology June 21, 2006.
1 Robert J. Spiegel, M.D. Sr. V. P. Medical Affairs Chief Medical Officer Schering Plough FDA ADVISORY COMMITTEE 5/11/01.
Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs Advisory Committee
Nonprescription Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting Charles J. Ganley, M.D. Division of OTC Drug Products September 19, 2002.
Nonprescription Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting Charles J. Ganley, M.D. Division of OTC Drug Products September 20, 2002.
Zelnorm ® (tegaserod) Division of Gastrointestinal and Coagulation Drug Products Division of Drug Risk Evaluation Gary Della’Zanna, D.O., M.Sc., F.A.C.O.S.
1 Overview of Pediatric Safety Reporting and Role of the Committee Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting November 18, 2005 Solomon Iyasu, M.D., M.P.H. Acting.
1 One Year Post Exclusivity Adverse Event Review: Glimepiride Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting November 16, 2006 Hari Cheryl Sachs, MD, FAAP Medical.
1 Joint NDAC/EMDAC Meeting January 13, 2005 Mevacor TM Daily 20 mg Tablets Rx-to-OTC Switch Daiva Shetty, M.D. Division of Over-the-Counter Drug Products.
Postmarketing Pharmacovigilance English D. Willis, MD Clinical Risk Management Merck Research Laboratories June 1, 2012.
1 One Year Post Exclusivity Adverse Event Review: Glyburide-Metformin Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting February 14, 2005 Hari Cheryl Sachs, MD, FAAP.
Viagra (sildenafil citrate): Extensive Clinical and Post-Marketing Experience Michael Sweeney, MD Senior Medical Director Pfizer Inc.
Rachel Neubrander, PhD Division of Cardiovascular Devices
EudraVigilance.
Reasonable Assurance of Safety and Effectiveness: An FDA Division of Cardiovascular Devices Perspective Bram Zuckerman, MD, FACC Director, FDA Division.
9. Introduction to signal detection
Combination products The paradigm shift
Began with the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drugs Act
Prescription-only vs. over-the-counter medicines
Compounded Drugs and Lack of Premarket FDA-Approval
Presentation transcript:

Safety Review for Plan B Daniel Davis, MD, MPH Division of Reproductive/Urologic Drugs

Outline of Topics Considerations for Non-prescription Switch Marketing Data and Distribution Patterns Sponsor’s Safety Data Office of Drug Safety Consultation Potential for Misuse and Abuse Contraindications FDA Safety Review Summary

Prescription to Non-prescription Switch Is there an acceptable margin of safety? Is the misuse and abuse potential low? Is the product safe and effective when used under non-prescription conditions? Do the benefits from the switch outweigh the risks?

Sponsor’s Exposure Data Plan B dose is 0.75 mg levonorgestrel x 2 USA: 2.4 million uses since 7/99 approval Worldwide: EC available in 101 countries –Use of products identical to Plan B: UK ~2.1 M uses France ~1.8 M uses Canada ~72,000 uses in most recent year

EC Distribution Patterns Routine prescription –68 countries, including the US Advance provision of a Rx or product Pharmacy access –From a pharmacist in 33 countries and 5 states –WA (‘97)- 300 pharmacies; ~1,700 pharmacists –CA (1/02), AK (3/02), NM (12/02), HI (6/03) Truly OTC in Norway and Sweden

Original NDA Safety Data Original NDA trial data –Pivotal World Health Org.(WHO) trial: N=1,955 –3 ongoing WHO trials + several smaller trials –Extensive literature review (N > 15,000 pts.) No deaths or SAEs ( serious adverse events ) AEs ( adverse events ) as labeled and consistent across all studies FDA found no signals of concern

Postmarketing Safety Data Postmarketing (PM) data limitations –exposure is estimated –likelihood of reporting certain AEs may be greater or lesser –under reporting of AEs –incomplete information in AE reports Many different PM data sources –overlap of reports

Plan B Postmarketing Safety Sponsor PM data since July ‘99 –Data from required periodic safety reports (n=345) AEs: most are mild, short-term, labeled AEs No reported transfusions, SAEs, or deaths –Safety data from many US and global sources National PM agencies worldwide WHO Drug Monitoring program Manufacturer and other databases –Global SAEs Death = 0 Strokes = 0 Thromboembolism = 0 Vascular event = 1 phlebitis

ODS Safety Consultation Office of Drug Safety (ODS) consult –Review of FDA AE data (AERS) and UK database –Focus on SAEs and ectopic pregnancy ODS consult findings (116 reports; 60% non-serious labeled events) –No deaths or cardiovascular events –Allergic reactions (10) - no hospitalizations –Fetal risk (8) - 5 spontaneous abortions; 3 anomalies

Ectopic Pregnancy ODS consult AERS findings (continued) –28 ectopics; none in US and no deaths Six large randomized clinical EC trials: –N = 7,889; 1.5 mg total dose –2 ectopics in 135 total pregnancies =1.5% UK and US ectopic rates are 1.2 and 2.0% in the general population

Potential Misuse and Abuse Overdose: review found no reports –unlikely with  cost Repeat doses up to 2.25 mg, single doses up to 1.5 mg demonstrated no safety concerns Repeat EC use: shown to be safe, uncommon –studies of advance provision and Rx EC users Use during pregnancy: no evidence that use will result in abortion or fetal injury Timing of 1 st and 2 nd dose

Contraindications [Prescription Plan B Label ] Prescription Plan B label lists 3 based on the class label for progestin-only OC pills –hypersensitivity to any component –known or suspected pregnancy (not a safety issue; the product will not work) –undiagnosed abnormal genital bleeding

Evidence of Safety Original NDA trial data Four additional published RCTs with ~6500 women in levonorgestrel only arms –same total dose as Plan B Findings from all 6 RCTs: –Deaths =0 –Vascular events = 0 –Thromboembolic events = 0 –2 ectopics in 135 pregnancies

Postmarketing Safety Data Postmarketing Data/Surveillance –Extensive EC use in US and Europe since 1999 –No reported deaths, cardiovascular events –No overdose –8 fetal AEs (3 congen. anomalies; 5 miscarriages) is low compared to background rates –10 allergic reactions: no hospitalizations or deaths

Summary of FDA Safety Review Review of RCTs, medical literature, and large safety surveillance databases –safety profile with no reported deaths, vascular or thromboembolic events –low misuse and abuse potential –risks are very limited –contraindication is allergy: rare –no demonstrated risks to a fetus or a pregnancy

Discussion Time

Timing of 1 st dose and treatment effect WHO pivotal study Time to treatment Pregnancy rate Plan B <24 hr0.4% (N = 450) hr1.2% (N = 338) hr2.7% (N = 187) All women 1.1% (N = 976)

Timing of the Second Dose WHO 2002 study –single 1.5 mg: 20/1356 = 1.48% pregnancies –two 0.75 mg: 24/1356 = 1.77% pregnancies Arowojolu 2002 study –single 1.5 mg: 4/573 = 0.67% pregnancies –two 0.75 mg: 7/545 = 1.28% pregnancies WHO 1998 study –2nd dose >18 hr in 86/1955: 0 pregnancies

Delayed First Dose ( hr) Expected pregnancy rate is 8.0% WHO study (2002)- levonorgestrel –N= 164, 2.4 % pregnancies CND study (2001)- Yuzpe –N= 169, 1.8% pregnancies Ellertson (2003)- Yuzpe –N= 111, 3.6% pregnancies Total N= 444; 11 pregnancies = 2.5%

Labeling Recommendations From a safety perspective: –Do not take if allergic to levonorgestrel –Contact your HCP if you experience: severe stomach or pelvic pain no menses within 1 week of expected menses any severe symptoms or symptoms > 48 hrs –Plan B does not protect against STIs; condoms should be used if at risk for STIs