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Pharmacovigilance workshop
Clinical Review of ADR Pharmacovigilance workshop
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Primohead and colleagues
18825 patient admissions analysed 1225 admissions with an ADR, (6.5%) 80% admission as inpatient median bed stay was eight days. Most were preventable 4% of the hospital bed capacity. The overall fatality was 0.15% (28) BMJ VOLUME JULY 2004
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Types of ADRs A= augmented B= Bizarre C= Continuous D= Delayed
E= End of use withdrawal
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Clinical review Assessing the clinical details
Determining the duration to onset of each event Noting data on de-challenge and re-challenge (if any) Assessing severity and seriousness; Checking the outcome of each event; Drug interaction Relationship assessment
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Assessing the clinical details
Detailed history For example, sometimes a “stomach upset” is reported, but this description is too vague. Is it dyspepsia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
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Determining the duration and onset of each event:
When did the event occur? What is the relation of the event to taking the drug?
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Data on de-challenge/re- challange
Stopping the medicine Partial or complete Results could be positive or negative Re-challenge Has to be under close supervision Negative/Positive
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Seriousness of the reaction
Not serious Hospitalisation Permanent disability Life threatening Congenital anomalies Death
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Severity Mild Moderate Severe
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Recovering with sequelae
Outcomes ADR Recovered Recovering Recovering with sequelae Died Un-known
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Drug interaction
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Relationship of ADR to drug
Start of drug Onset of ADR Challenge De-challenge Days/hours
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Skin Cutaneous drug reactions 10-20%.
Idiosyncratic... Due to an immune response. Can occur from 1-14 after starting therapy Ranges from mild urticaria to potentially life threatening e.g. TEN and SJS
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Co-Trimoxazole Molibiliform eruptions Steven Johnson Syndrome
Histologic examination reveals a lymphocytic interface dermatitis with vacuolar changes at the dermal-epidermal junction and papillary dermal edema and eosinophils. Dyskeratotic cells may be found along the dermal-epidermal junction (Crowson and Magro, 1999).
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Mucosal involvement with Steven Johnson syndrome
Ocular Involvement
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Identifying the drug as causative
Other causes for the eruption... Relationship between drug use and onset of the rash. Improvement when drug is stopped. Reactivation upon re-challenge of the drug Known cutaneous reaction with drug SJS implicated with many drugs mainly sulphonamides but can occur with any antibiotic
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Drug induced liver disorders
Up to one-half of the cases of acute liver failure Common cause of drug withdrawal Idiosyncratic or Predictable Acute or chronic E.g. Isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide
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Clinical Presentation
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Symptoms Asymptomatic Symptomatic:
malaise, low-grade fever, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, right upper quadrant pain, jaundice, acholic stools, or dark urine. Patients with cholestasis can report pruritus.
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Risk factors for Drug induced liver disorders
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Key elements Drug exposure preceded the onset of liver injury
Underlying liver disease is excluded Stopping the drug leads to improvement in the liver injury Re-challenge = severe recurrence
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Others associated with Anti TB drugs
Other gastrointestinal Retinitis Neuropathies Renal Drowsiness…………………
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