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INDIAN PHARMACOVIGILANCE SYSTEM

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Title: INDIAN PHARMACOVIGILANCE SYSTEM


1
INDIAN PHARMACOVIGILANCE SYSTEM PRESENT STATUS
AND FUTURE CHALLENGES
2
PHARMACOVIGILANCE
Pharmacovigilance is the science and activities
relating to the detection, assessment
understanding and prevention of adverse effect or
any other possible drug-related problems.
3
MAGNITUDE OF THE PROBLEM
  • In the U.S. alone 2.2 million hospitalized
    patients have serious ADRs each year, of which
    106,000 have a fatal outcome
  • Cost of drug related morbidity and mortality
    exceeds 177.4 billion annually
  • 30 - 50 ADRs are preventable

4
HISTORICAL MILESTONES
  • 1937- Over 100 people died from renal failure due
    to an elixir of sulfanilamide dissolved in
    diethylene glycol
  • 1938- FDA made preclinical toxicity studies and
    pre-marketing clinical trials mandatory
  • 1950s- Aplastic anaemia shown to be due to
    chloramphenicol
  • 1960- Hospital based drug monitoring programme
    started by FDA

5
HISTORICAL MILESTONES..contd.
  • 1961- Thalidomide disaster
  • 1968- WHO established its International Drug
    Monitoring Programme
  • 1970s- Subacute myelo-optic neuropathy linked to
    clioquinol
  • 1980s 1990s large number of drugs with serious
    adverse effects

6
GOALS OF PHARMACOVIGILANCE
  • Rational and safe use of medicinal drugs
  • Assessment and communication of risks and
    benefits of drugs on the market
  • Educating and informing the patients

7
OBJECTIVES OF PHARMACOVIGILANCE
  • Early detection of hitherto unknown adverse
    reactions and interactions especially for the
    newly marketed drugs
  • Detection of increase in frequency of (known)
    adverse reactions
  • Identification of risk factors and possible
    mechanisms underlying adverse reactions
  • Benefit-risk analysis

8
PLAYERS IN PHARMACOVIGILANCE
  • WHO
  • Uppsala Monitoring Centre
  • National Pharmacovigilance Centres
  • Hospitals and Academia
  • Healthcare professionals
  • Patients
  • Media and consumer advocacy groups

9
WHO PROGRAMME OF INTERNATIOAL DRUG MONITORING
  • Identification analysis of new adverse
    reaction signal from the case report information
    submitted to the National Centres.
  • Provision of the WHO database as reference source
    for signal . Web-based search facilities
  • Information exchange between WHO National
    Centres.
  • Guidelines and books publications of Periodical
    newsletters in the pharmacovigilance and risk
    management area

10
WHO PROGRAMME OF INTERNATIOAL DRUG MONITORING
  • Tools for management of Clinical information
  • Training and consultancy support
  • Software for case report management
  • Meeting for representatives of National Centers
  • Methodological Research

11
UPPSALA MONITORING CENTRE
12
OVERVIEW AREAS OF WORK OF THE UPPSALA
MONITORING CENTRE
  • Receipt, analysis recording of worldwide
    adverse event data
  • Maintenance screening of international database
    (currently over 3.7 million records)
  • Publication of previously unknown adverse events
    in SIGNAL.
  • Editing, updating publishing the WHO Drug
    Dictionary

13
OVERVIEW AREAS OF WORK OF THE UPPSALA
MONITORING CENTRE
  • Maintaining publishing the Adverse Reaction
    Terminology (WHO-ART)
  • Carrying out special searches of the database by
    request
  • Publishing a range of special reports
  • Assistance to potential members of the Programme
    in developing their Pharmacovigilance system
  • Running training courses in Pharmacovigilance

14
COUNTRIES PARTICIPATING IN THE WHO INTERNATIOAL
DRUG MOINTORING PROGRAMME
  • Official Member Countries (dark Blue)
  • 81 Countries Members
  • 17 Countries Associate

15
PHARMACOVIGILANCE .IS IT NEEDED IN EVERY COUNTRY?
  • There are differences between countries in the
    occurrence of adverse drug reactions due to
    differences in
  • drug production
  • drug distribution and use
  • genetics, diet, traditions of the people
  • use of non-orthodox drugs (e.g. traditional
    medicines)

16
PHARMACOVIGILANCE - THE WIDENING HORIZONS
  • Traditional and complementary medicines
  • Blood products vaccines
  • Medical devices
  • Cosmetics
  • Counterfeit and substandard medicine
  • Increasing self-medication practices
  • Illegal sale of medicines drugs of abuse over
    the internet
  • Medication errors

17
INDIAN AWARENESS
  • After the clioquinol incidence.
  • Withdrawal of clioquinol
  • Establishment of DCGI centers
  • Program still remained dormant till1990s
  • National Pharmacovigilance center 1998
  • NPVPCDSCO

18
NATIONAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE CENTRE(WHO-UMC)1998
19
BROAD OBJECTIVES OF PROGRAMME
  • To foster the culture of AE notification and
    reporting
  • To establish a viable and broad-based ADR
    monitoring program in India.
  • Specific objectives of the Programme
  • To create an ADR database for the Indian
    Population

  • contd.

20
BROAD OBJECTIVES OF PROGRAMME
  • To create awareness of ADR monitoring among
    people
  • To ensure optimum safety of drug products in
    Indian market
  • To create infrastructure for ongoing regulatory
    review of PSURs

21
NATIONAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE POLICY MILESTONES
  • The National Pharmacovigilance Programme will
    have the following milestones
  • Short-term objectives To foster a culture of
    notification
  • Medium-term objectives To engage several
    healthcare professionals and NGOs in the drug
    monitoring and information dissemination
    processes.
  • Long-term objectives To achieve such
    operational efficiencies that would make Indian
    National Pharmacovigilance Programme a benchmark
    for global drug monitoring endeavours.

22
NATIONAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE ADVISORY COMMITEE
Director General Health Services
Chairperson
D. G., ICMR, New Delhi
ICMR
Dr. S. K. Gupta, Former, Head of the Department
of Pharmacology, AIIMS, New Delhi
AIIMS, New Delhi, Zonal Centre Coordinator
Dr. Nilima Kshirsagar, SGS Medical College
(Mumbai)
SGC Medical College, Mumbai, Zonal Centre
Coordinator
Dr. Ranjit Roy Choudhary, NII, New Delhi Dr. C.
Adithan, Prof. Pharmacology JIPMER, Pondicherry
Member, Pharmacology
Dr. T. D. Dogra, (AIIMS, New Delhi)
Forensic Medicine
Dr. A. K. Agarwal (RML, New Delhi)Dr. Anoop
Mishra (AIIMS, New Delhi)
General Medicine
23
NATIONAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE ADVISORY COMMITTEE
(cont..)
24
HIERARCHIAL STRUCTURE OF PROPOSED CENTRES
25
PERIPHERAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE CENTRE ACTIVITIES
  • Primary contact ADR data collection center
  • Small Medical centers nursing homes (Clinics,
    Private hospitals, Pharmacies)
  • Primary Pharamcovigilance centers
  • Identified coordinated by RPCs/ZPCs
  • At least one in each state UT and some other
    leading medical College

26
REGIONAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE CENTRE ACTIVITIES
  • ( Secondary Pharmacovigilance Centre)
  • Relatively larger facilities attached with
    medical college
  • Will act as secondary level centers
  • First contact for ADE data collection
  • Identified and coordinated by Zonal centres
  • (Five regional centre)

27
ZONAL PHARMACOVIGILANCE CENTRES
  • ( TERTIARY PHARMACOVIGILANCE CENTRE)
  • Large health care facility attached with medical
    college in metro cities
  • Identified by CDSCO
  • 3rd level levels
  • Also act as Ist ADE data collection centre
  • AIIMS (North East zone)
  • KEM Mumbai (South and West)

28
CENTRAL DRUG CONTROL STANDARD ORGANISATION (CDSCO)
  • To establish and manage database of ADRs
  • To make regulatory decisions regarding marketing
    authorization and safety of drugs
  • Possible regulatory measures in coordination
    with NPAC

29
A PHARMACOVIGILANCE ARENA
Ministry of Health
Regulation and Legislation
Drug users Patients Organizations
Pharmao-vigilance
WHO Harmonization and Transparency of
policy Uppsala Monitoring Centre Essential drug
list
NGOs Health Action International International
consumer Organizations
Information media
Healthcare Professionals Academia
Pharmaceutical Products and Companies
30
UMC WHO
CDSCO

ZONAL INTENSIVE MONITORING SPECIFIC PROJECTS
REGIONAL ZONAL CENTRES Analyzed/Assessed
PERIPHERAL CENTRES ADRs/ADEs
31
DRUG WITHDRAWALS THE ENVIRONMENT NOW
  • New medicines reaching market faster than ever
    before
  • New science new ADRs
  • Public expectations higher than ever- 60 people
    assume safety guaranteed

32
COMMUNICATIONS ARE CRITICAL
  • Clear, comprehensible, targeted messages meeting
    the needs of audience
  • Health professionals
  • The public
  • Other regulatory authorities and WHO

33
DRUG WITHDRWALS- THE CHALLENGES
  • Robust evidence
  • Timely decision making
  • Effective communications
  • Demonstrable protection of public health

34
DRUG WITHDRAWALS THE EVIDENCE
  • Strengthen spontaneous reporting and signal
    detection
  • Use epidemiological databases to strengthen
    signals- and also to detect?
  • Look for evidence of safety as well as harm

35
DRUG WIDHRWALS - OPPORTUNITIES
  • New data sharing technology
  • New EU legislative power
  • Risk management plans
  • Better communications- including electronic
  • Public education on risk

36
PHARMACOVIGILANCE..THE CHALLENGES AHEAD
  • Globalization
  • Broader safety concerns
  • Public health versus pharmaceutical industry
    economic growth
  • Monitoring of established products
  • Developing and emerging countries
  • Improving communication amongst various partners
    in pharmacovigilance.

37
MESSAGE
  • To achieve the ultimate goal of pharmacovigilance
    i.e. rational and safe use of drugs
  • Every person on earth needs to be involved
  • Lets strive to make the world a safer place to
    live where benefit-risk ratio of drug therapy is
    in favor of the human race

38
Its time to join hands Share a common goal to
deliver safe drugs to our patients 
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