Abstract

Individual case safety reports (ICSRs) are a cornerstone in drug safety surveillance. The knowledge on using these data specifically for children is limited. We studied characteristics of pediatric ICSRs reported to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). Public available ICSRs reported in children (0–18 years) to FAERS were downloaded from the FDA-website for the period Jan 2004-Dec 2011. Characteristics of these ICSRs, including the reported drugs and events, were described and stratified by age-groups. We included 106,122 pediatric ICSRs (55% boys and 58% from United States) with a median of 1 drug [range 1–3] and 1 event [1–2] per ICSR. Mean age was 9.1 years. 90% was submitted through expedited (15-days) (65%) or periodic reporting (25%) and 10% by non-manufacturers. The proportion and type of pediatric ICSRs reported were relatively stable over time. Most commonly reported drug classes by decreasing frequency were ‘nervous system drugs’ (58%), ‘antineoplastics’ (32%) and ‘anti-infectives’ (25%). Most commonly reported system organ classes were ‘general’ (13%), ‘nervous system’ (12%) and ‘psychiatric’ (11%) disorders. Duration of use could be calculated for 19.7% of the reported drugs, of which 14.5% concerned drugs being used long-term (>6 months). Knowledge on the distribution of the drug classes and events within FAERS is a key first step in developing pediatric specific methods for drug safety surveillance. Because of several differences in terms of drugs and events among age-categories, drug safety signal detection analysis in children needs to be stratified by each age group.

Highlights

  • The limited knowledge about the effects of drugs in children has boosted initiatives by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and triggered new legislation in recent years [1, 2]

  • In the current study we aimed to describe the pediatric Individual case safety reports (ICSRs) as reported within FAERS

  • 106,122 (2.9%) ICSRs occurred in children

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Summary

Introduction

The limited knowledge about the effects of drugs in children has boosted initiatives by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and triggered new legislation in recent years [1, 2]. The Global Research in Paediatrics Network of Excellence (GRiP) is an EU-funded consortium, which aims to implement an infrastructure facilitating the development and safe use of medicines in children. This entails the development of a comprehensive educational programme and integrated use of existing research capacity, whilst reducing the fragmentation and duplication of efforts [3, 4]. Post-marketing drug safety surveillance using spontaneous reporting systems is essential in studying drug safety [5]. An important part of the GRiP project is evaluating current and developing new methodology for post-marketing drug safety studies for the pediatric population. Typical large spontaneous reporting systems include VigiBase of the WHO Uppsala Monitoring Center (WHO-UMC), the Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS), maintained by United States (US) Food and Drug Administration (FDA-AERS, FAERS), the Vaccine Adverse Effect Reporting System (VAERS), maintained by FDA and CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), and EudraVigilance of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) [6,7,8,9]

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