A pharmacoepidemiological network model for drug safety surveillance: statins and rhabdomyolysis.

Ben Y Reis, Karen L Olson, Lu Tian, Rhonda L Bohn, John S Brownstein, Peter J Park, Mark J Cziraky, Marcus D Wilson, Kenneth D Mandl
Author Information
  1. Ben Y Reis: Childrens Hospital Informatics Program, Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Childrens Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent withdrawals of major drugs have highlighted the critical importance of drug safety surveillance in the postmarketing phase. Limitations of spontaneous report data have led drug safety professionals to pursue alternative postmarketing surveillance approaches based on healthcare administrative claims data. These data are typically analysed by comparing the adverse event rates associated with a drug of interest to those of a single comparable reference drug.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine whether adverse event detection can be improved by incorporating information from multiple reference drugs. We developed a pharmacological network model that implemented this approach and evaluated its performance.
METHODS: We studied whether adverse event detection can be improved by incorporating information from multiple reference drugs, and describe two approaches for doing so. The first, reported previously, combines a set of related drugs into a single reference cohort. The second is a novel pharmacoepidemiological network model, which integrates multiple pair-wise comparisons across an entire set of related drugs into a unified consensus safety score for each drug. We also implemented a single reference drug approach for comparison with both multi-drug approaches. All approaches were applied within a sequential analysis framework, incorporating new information as it became available and addressing the issue of multiple testing over time. We evaluated all these approaches using statin (HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors) safety data from a large healthcare insurer in the US covering April 2000 through March 2005.
RESULTS: We found that both multiple reference drug approaches offer earlier detection (6-13 months) than the single reference drug approach, without triggering additional false positives.
CONCLUSIONS: Such combined approaches have the potential to be used with existing healthcare databases to improve the surveillance of therapeutics in the postmarketing phase over single-comparator methods. The proposed network approach also provides an integrated visualization framework enabling decision makers to understand the key high-level safety relationships amongst a group of related drugs.

References

  1. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Feb 18;100(4):1961-5 [PMID: 12574522]
  2. N Engl J Med. 2006 Mar 16;354(11):1193 [PMID: 16495386]
  3. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2009 Mar;18(3):226-34 [PMID: 19148879]
  4. N Engl J Med. 2007 Apr 26;356(17):1703-4 [PMID: 17435082]
  5. J Clin Epidemiol. 2005 Feb;58(2):171-4 [PMID: 15680751]
  6. Med Care. 2007 Oct;45(10 Supl 2):S143-8 [PMID: 17909373]
  7. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2008 Dec;17(12):1175-82 [PMID: 18823068]
  8. Am J Cardiol. 2006 Apr 17;97(8A):6C-26C [PMID: 16581330]
  9. PLoS One. 2007 Sep 05;2(9):e840 [PMID: 17786211]
  10. JAMA. 2006 May 3;295(17):2072-5 [PMID: 16670415]
  11. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2007 Dec;16(12):1275-84 [PMID: 17955500]
  12. PLoS Med. 2007 Jun;4(6):e210 [PMID: 17593895]
  13. BMJ. 2001 Aug 18;323(7309):359 [PMID: 11509419]
  14. N Engl J Med. 2006 Oct 26;355(17):1753-5 [PMID: 17030843]
  15. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2006 Dec;63(12):1358-67 [PMID: 17146010]
  16. JAMA. 2004 Dec 1;292(21):2647-50 [PMID: 15572723]
  17. JAMA. 2007 Jul 18;298(3):333-4 [PMID: 17635895]
  18. J Chronic Dis. 1987;40(5):373-83 [PMID: 3558716]
  19. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2001 Mar-Apr;10(2):105-11 [PMID: 11499848]
  20. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2007 Sep-Oct;14(5):581-8 [PMID: 17600100]
  21. JAMA. 2004 Dec 1;292(21):2622-31 [PMID: 15572720]
  22. JAMA. 2006 Oct 4;296(13):1633-44 [PMID: 16968831]
  23. Am J Cardiol. 2006 Apr 17;97(8A):61C-68C [PMID: 16581331]
  24. JAMA. 2004 Dec 1;292(21):2585-90 [PMID: 15572716]
  25. Am J Cardiol. 2006 Apr 17;97(8A):52C-60C [PMID: 16581329]
  26. Neuropsychopharmacology. 2006 Apr;31(4):689-99 [PMID: 16395296]
  27. JAMA. 2007 Aug 22;298(8):851-2 [PMID: 17712064]
  28. Lancet. 2004 Dec 4-10;364(9450):2021-9 [PMID: 15582059]
  29. Arch Intern Med. 2004 Nov 22;164(21):2367-70 [PMID: 15557417]
  30. N Engl J Med. 2002 Feb 14;346(7):539-40 [PMID: 11844864]
  31. N Engl J Med. 2005 Mar 17;352(11):1092-102 [PMID: 15713943]
  32. Nature. 2007 Mar 22;446(7134):358-9 [PMID: 17377551]

Grants

  1. R01 GM085421/NIGMS NIH HHS
  2. R01 GM89731/NIGMS NIH HHS
  3. R01 LM007677/NLM NIH HHS
  4. R01 LM009879/NLM NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems
Cohort Studies
Drug Monitoring
Female
Humans
Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors
Male
Middle Aged
Models, Theoretical
Pharmacoepidemiology
Retrospective Studies
Rhabdomyolysis
Risk Factors
United States

Chemicals

Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0drugapproachesreferencedrugssafetymultipledatasinglenetworkapproachsurveillancepostmarketinghealthcareadverseeventdetectionincorporatinginformationmodelrelatedphasewhethercanimprovedimplementedevaluatedsetpharmacoepidemiologicalalsoframeworkBACKGROUND:RecentwithdrawalsmajorhighlightedcriticalimportanceLimitationsspontaneousreportledprofessionalspursuealternativebasedadministrativeclaimstypicallyanalysedcomparingratesassociatedinterestcomparableOBJECTIVE:aimstudydeterminedevelopedpharmacologicalperformanceMETHODS:studieddescribetwofirstreportedpreviouslycombinescohortsecondnovelintegratespair-wisecomparisonsacrossentireunifiedconsensusscorecomparisonmulti-drugappliedwithinsequentialanalysisnewbecameavailableaddressingissuetestingtimeusingstatinHMG-CoAreductaseinhibitorslargeinsurerUScoveringApril2000March2005RESULTS:foundofferearlier6-13monthswithouttriggeringadditionalfalsepositivesCONCLUSIONS:combinedpotentialusedexistingdatabasesimprovetherapeuticssingle-comparatormethodsproposedprovidesintegratedvisualizationenablingdecisionmakersunderstandkeyhigh-levelrelationshipsamongstgroupsurveillance:statinsrhabdomyolysis

Similar Articles

Cited By