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Adverse Events and Serious Adverse Events

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An unexpected medical problem that occurs during treatment with a drug or other therapy. ... Physician copies the research nurse's note and also dictates constipation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adverse Events and Serious Adverse Events


1
Adverse Events and Serious Adverse Events
  • Office of Research Education and Regulatory
    Management

2
Objectives
  • Recognize Adverse Events and serious adverse
    events
  • Review FDA inspection findings related to adverse
    events
  • Review regulations related to adverse events
  • Discuss recording and reporting of adverse events
  • Discuss auditing of adverse events
  • Demonstrate audit of adverse events

3
FDA Inspection
  • Failure to prepare and submit complete and
    accurate and timely reports of unanticipated
    adverse device effects

4
Recognizing
5
Adverse Events
  • Any adverse event associated with the use of a
    drug in humans, whether or not considered
    related.
  • 21CFR 314.80
  • Any untoward medical occurrence in a patient
    administered a pharmaceutical product and which
    does not necessarily have a causal relationship
    with the treatment
  • ICH E6

6
Adverse Event
  • NCI
  • An unexpected medical problem that occurs during
    treatment with a drug or other therapy.
  • Adverse events do not have to be a caused by the
    drug or therapy

7
Serious Adverse Event
  • Fred
  • Doesnt
  • Have
  • Any
  • Money
  • Left
  • Fatal
  • Disability
  • Hospitalization
  • Anomaly
  • Medically Significant
  • Life Threatening

8
Expected Vs. Unexpected
  • Unexpected
  • Not listed in Investigational Brochure, Informed
    Consent, or General Investigational Plan
  • Also not listed in a drug package insert
  • Expected
  • Known to Occur and is Listed in the
    Investigational Brochure, Informed Consent, or
    General Investigational Plan

9
Recording
10
Recording
  • Know which adverse events the protocol requires
    to be captured

11
Source Documentation
  • Source Documentation of adverse events include
    documentation in the medical records of
  • Event
  • Date it occurred
  • Grade as determined by CTCAE
  • Expected or Unexpected
  • Attribution as assigned by PI
  • Date resolved
  • Treatment patient received specifically related
    to event

12
Sample Adverse Event Recording Form
  • See template behind this presentation

13
(No Transcript)
14
Attribution (Causality)
  • The attribution (relationship or causality or
    drug related assessment) must be determined
  • A determination made by a clinical investigator
    that describes the relationship or association
    of the study product with an adverse experience
  • This determination must be recorded both in the
    medical record as well as in the case report form.

15
Attribution
  • What should the investigator consider prior to
    assigning attribution?
  • Individual medical history
  • Known effects of concomitant medications

16
Attribution
  • Definite Clearly related to study agent
  • Probable Likely related to study agent
  • Possible May be related to study agent
  • Unlikely Doubtfully related to study agent
  • Unrelated Clearly not related to study agent

17
How to Capture Adverse Events?
  • Split or Lumped
  • Fever, Diarrhea, and Vomiting (Viral
    Gastroenteritis)
  • Cough, Sniffles, Sore throat (Flu)

18
How to Capture Adverse Events?
  • Problems with similar terms
  • Rash or Dermatitis
  • Wheezing, reactive airway disease, congestion,
    cold, , asthma

19
Documenting Resolution Dates
  • Challenge
  • Does the patient remember when their adverse
    event resolved?
  • Do you call the patient? Or wait till the next
    visit?

20
Patient Toxicity Diary
  • Diaries where patients capture toxicities between
    their follow up appointments

21
Patient Toxicity Diaries
  • Patient writes down constipation because he did
    not have a bowel movement one day
  • Research nurse captures constipation without
    assessing further
  • Physician copies the research nurses note and
    also dictates constipation
  • Did anyone ask about the constipation?
  • According to CTC V3, constipation is grade 1 only
    if there is occasional or intermittent symptoms
    occasional use of stool softeners, laxatives,
    dietary modification, or enema

22
Patient Adverse Event Diaries
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Allows capturing information on a daily basis
    while patient is away from clinic
  • A communication tool for patient returns to
    clinic
  • Useful in capturing onset and resolution dates of
    adverse events
  • Time consuming
  • Patient non-compliance
  • Patient self diagnosis or interpretation
  • Complicated Instructions

23
Question to ask
  • When should site staff begin collecting adverse
    event information?

24
Question to ask
  • How long should one collect adverse events after
    the subject completes study treatment?

25
Reporting
26
Reporting Serious Events
  • An investigator must promptly report to the
    sponsor any adverse effect that may reasonably be
    regarded as caused by or probably caused by the
    drug. If the adverse effect is alarming, the
    investigator shall report the adverse effect
    immediately.
  • 21CFR312.64

27
Reporting Criteria
  • Routine Reporting
  • Know which events can be reported at interim
    analysis or annual reviews
  • Expedited Reporting
  • Know which events require immediate reporting

28
Reporting Criteria
  • Know which type of expedited reports each
    regulatory body requires
  • FDA
  • Sponsor
  • Co-Sponsor
  • MD Anderson
  • NCI
  • Collaborative Groups

29
Issues in reporting
  • Primary events
  • Example
  • Patient admitted with Congestive Heart Failure
  • Subsequently develops Pulmonary Edema and
    Cardiogenic Shock

30
Consequences of Improper Reporting
  • Protocol Violations
  • IRB will close protocol
  • FDA Hold
  • Sponsor Hold
  • Research Privileges Revoked
  • Patient Safety

31
Auditing
32
Auditing Check Points
  • How are AEs being recorded in the medical record?
  • Does documentation include grade, onset,
    resolution, and attribution?

33
Auditing Check Points
  • Were all toxicities included?
  • Was the proper CTCAE version used for the
    protocol?
  • Were the toxicities graded appropriately?

34
Auditing Check Points
  • Was the event a dose limiting toxicity?
  • Should the dose have been reduced?
  • If so, did the research team realize it as such
    and identify it correctly?

35
Auditing
  • Are adverse events appropriately reported within
    the time periods required by regulations,
    sponsor, and IRB policies?

36
We have reviewed.
  • Recognizing adverse events and serious adverse
    events
  • Inspections and findings related to adverse
    events
  • Regulations related to adverse events
  • Recording and reporting of adverse events
  • Auditing of adverse events
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