Principles and Practice of Pharmaceutical Medicine

(Elle) #1
example several reports coming from the same
doctor or practice (is the so-called hepatotoxi-
city really a local outbreak of viral hepatitis or
due to some strange doctor still giving aspirin to
children and causing Reye syndrome).


  1. Carefully reassess the balance of benefit
    and risk and determine if this has changed
    and, if so, in what way. The ADR data (yellow
    cards in the United Kingdom) form the
    numerator. The company is in the best position
    to know the number of patients treated (the
    denominator). Has the ratio changed? What is
    the indication for the drug (rare, severe
    adverse effects may be acceptable in an effec-
    tive anticancer agent, whereas almost total
    safety would be demanded for an oral con-
    traceptive used in fit, healthy people early in
    adult life). If the drug is withdrawn what
    remedies remain for the management of the
    indication – and what is the picture of their
    comparative toxicity? Make quite sure that
    the problem is not arising from some new,
    previously undescribed iatrogenic disease
    (e.g. the oculomucocutaneous syndrome with
    practolol); in a similar way rule out long-
    latency adverse reactions (e.g. sclerosing peri-
    tonitis – again with practolol). Be careful to
    determine what other drugs the patients
    were receiving (is the problem a drug–drug
    interaction).

  2. Consider whether the current pharmacovigi-
    lance program is adequate to deal with the
    new issues arising. The situation may have
    greatly changed – new data may focus attention
    on one specific adverse effect and, for example,
    a case control study on that reaction might need
    to be established with the General Practitioner
    ResearchDatabase (GPRD),orsome other data-
    base, as a matter of extreme urgency. It is now
    known what the cases must be in such a study
    and that changes the picture completely. Any
    such study must almost always need to be con-
    ducted in an existing database as time and the
    urgency of the situation will not permit any
    study which requires the prospective acquisition
    of data.


44.4 Escaping from the maze


Although escape may be impossible, and the drug
has to be withdrawn in the best interests of the
patients, there have been survivors. The techniques
used have included the following:

1.Focussed surveillance:The classic example is
clozapine and the Clozaril Patient Monitoring
Service. Clozapine is a valuable antischizophre-
nic agent used in patients unresponsive to other
antipsychotic agents. Its side-effect profile
includes fatal agranulocytosis, myocarditis
and cardiomyopathy. Because the drug can be
effective in severe schizophrenia when other
remedies have failed it was desired to maintain
it in clinical use despite the known incidence of
uncommon blood dyscrasias and cardiac
adverse reactions. This was accomplished by
establishing the Clozaril Patient Monitoring
Service with which the patient, prescriber and
supplying pharmacist must be registered before
the drug will be supplied. The monitoring ser-
vice ensures that leukocyte and differential
blood counts, plus other observations, are
undertaken at suitable intervals. The scheme
has been highly effective and similar schemes
have been established by other pharmacutical
houses supplying the drug. Clearly, this kind of
intense focussed management can be used only
when it will prevent withdrawal of a uniquely
valuable therapeutic agent active against life-
threatening disease.

2.Contraindication in a susceptible subpopula-
tion:Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) has been
associated with the occurrence of Reye syn-
drome and, as a result, the Committee on
Safety of Medicines has advised that aspirin-
containing preparations should not be given
to children and adolescents under 16 years of
age unless specifically indicated, for example
for Kawasaki syndrome. Establishing this con-
traindication, relating to what is probably the
most widely used medicine known, involved
educating the whole community and repre-
sented one of the most remarkable therapeutic
achievements of the late twentieth century. The

582 CH44 DRUG WITHDRAWALS FROM THE MARKET – CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES

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