Pharmacoeconomics and Safe Medication Use
The FAERS and VAERS databases are used as postmarketing surveillance systems. Limitations of
FAERS and VAERS include the following:
Lack of certainty of adverse event (i.e., may not be validated)
Underreporting
Less severe adverse events likely to be underreported
| d. | Potential lack of detail provided |
|---|
Reporting of ADEs by health care professionals and consumers to the FDA is voluntary and may be
done through the FDAβs MedWatch program (begun in 1993). All of the following may be reported with
respect to an FDA-regulated medication, biologic, tobacco product, dietary supplement, cosmetic, or
medical device:
Serious ADE
Serious ADR
Product quality problem
| d. | Product use error |
|---|
Therapeutic inequivalence
Therapeutic failure
Clinicians may report an ADE directly to the drugβs manufacturer. The pharmaceutical manufacturer
has a legal responsibility to follow up with the reporter on all ADEs reported and to report the ADE to
the FDA.
ADE reports and medication error reports submitted directly by health care professionals or manufacturers
are entered in the FAERS database.
If the FDA detects a safety concern, regulatory action may be needed to protect the public, such as
updating the product labeling, restricting the drug, communicating the safety concerns to health care
professionals and consumers, or removing the drug from the market.
A comprehensive ADE program should have a policy and procedure, with guidelines for ADE detection,
reporting, management, surveillance, and education.
The purpose of a reporting program includes improving patient care, education of health care
professionals, complementing organizational risk management with respect to medication use, and
assessing safety of medication therapies.
A comprehensive program includes a surveillance system, which includes prospective and
retrospective surveillance systems, and tools to improve medication safety, including event
monitoring and CDS.
Appendix 1 shows an ADE reporting form.
ADEs, pharmacists often serve as chair or co-chair of the ADE/medication safety committee.
The ADE committee should be interdisciplinary and composed of the following:
Prescribers
Pharmacists
Nurses
| d. | Risk management personnel |
|---|
Quality assurance and performance improvement personnel
Other health care providers
Informaticist
Administrator
In general, the ADE committee is a subcommittee of the pharmacy and therapeutics (P&T) committee
that reports to the P&T committee.