Trends of reporting of 'serious'vs. 'non-serious' adverse drug reactions over time: a study in the French PharmacoVigilance Database.

Guillaume Moulis, Agnès Sommet, Geneviève Durrieu, Haleh Bagheri, Maryse Lapeyre-Mestre, Jean-Louis Montastruc, French Association of PharmacoVigilance Centres
Author Information
  1. Guillaume Moulis: CHU Toulouse, Service de Pharmacologie Clinique, Centre Midi-Pyrénées de PharmacoVigilance, de Pharmacoépidémiologie et d'Informations sur le Médicament, Toulouse, F-31059, France. guillaume.moulis@univ-tlse3.fr

Abstract

WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT: • Several factors are known to influence spontaneous reporting of adverse drug reactions (ADRs). Among them, 'seriousness' of the reaction is one of the most important. • However, evolution in the reporting of 'serious'vs.'non-serious' ADRs over time for the same drug remains unknown.
WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS: • Spontaneous reports mainly involve 'non-serious' ADRs during the first years of marketing and 'serious' ADRs later, particularly for drugs with non-hospital use.
AIM: To investigate trends in spontaneous reporting to the French Pharmacovigilance system of 'serious' (SADRs) and 'non-serious' (NSADRs) adverse drug reactions over time.
METHODS: Annual SADR : NSADR ratios were calculated for each drug and their evolution tested with linear trend tests.
RESULTS: Among the 39 new active substances commercialized in France in 2000, 16 had sufficient data to perform linear trend tests. An increasing linear relation was found for five widely prescribed drugs, a non-significant increasing trend for eight others, i.e. drugs mostly used in hospitals.
CONCLUSION: ADR reports mainly concern NSADRs during first years of marketing. Reports of SADRs are proportionally more frequent later.

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MeSH Term

Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems
Attitude of Health Personnel
Databases, Factual
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
France
Humans
Pharmacovigilance
Time Factors

Word Cloud

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