• Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf · Aug 2015

    Review

    Pediatric post-marketing safety systems in North America: assessment of the current status.

    • Ann W McMahon, Gerold T Wharton, Renan Bonnel, Mary DeCelle, Kimberley Swank, Daniela Testoni, Judith U Cope, Phillip Brian Smith, Eileen Wu, and Mary Dianne Murphy.
    • Office of Pediatric Therapeutics, Office of the Commissioner, US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, MD, USA.
    • Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2015 Aug 1; 24 (8): 785-92.

    PurposeIt is critical to have pediatric post-marketing safety systems that contain enough clinical and epidemiological detail to draw regulatory, public health, and clinical conclusions. The pediatric safety surveillance workshop (PSSW), coordinated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), identified these pediatric systems as of 2010. This manuscript aims to update the information from the PSSW and look critically at the systems currently in use.MethodsWe reviewed North American pediatric post-marketing safety systems such as databases, networks, and research consortiums found in peer-reviewed journals and other online sources. We detail clinical examples from three systems that FDA used to assess pediatric medical product safety.ResultsOf the 59 systems reviewed for pediatric content, only nine were pediatric-focused and met the inclusion criteria. Brief descriptions are provided for these nine. The strengths and weaknesses of three systems (two of the nine pediatric-focused and one including both children and adults) are illustrated with clinical examples.ConclusionsSystems reviewed in this manuscript have strengths such as clinical detail, a large enough sample size to capture rare adverse events, and/or a patient denominator internal to the database. Few systems include all of these attributes. Pediatric drug safety would be better informed by utilizing multiple systems to take advantage of their individual characteristics.Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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