Title: One Year Post-Exclusivity Adverse Event Review for Tamiflu
1One Year Post-Exclusivity Adverse Event Review
forTamiflu (oseltamivir)
- Pediatric Advisory Committee Meeting
- November 18, 2005
- Melissa M. Truffa, R.Ph.
- Safety Evaluator Team Leader
- Division of Drug Risk Evaluation
- Office of Drug Safety
- Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
-
2Overview
- Background/Regulatory History
- Tamiflu Drug Use Data
- AERS Adverse Event Reports for oseltamivir during
post-exclusivity (Mar. 22, 2004 to Apr. 22, 2005) - Japanese Experience with Tamiflu
- Summary
3Background
- Drug Tamiflu (oseltamivir phosphate) capsules
and oral suspension - Therapeutic Class Neuraminidase inhibitor
- Sponsor Roche Pharmaceuticals
- Indications
- Treatment of influenza in adults and pediatrics (
1 yr) - Prophylaxis of influenza in adults and pediatrics
( 13 yrs)
4US Regulatory History
Approval Date Indication Population
Oct. 27, 1999 Tamiflu capsules Treatment of influenza Adults
Nov. 17, 2000 Prophylaxis of influenza Adults and Pediatrics 13
Dec. 14, 2000 Tamiflu Suspension Treatment of influenza Adults and Pediatrics 1
Pending Prophylaxis of influenza Pediatrics 1-12
Pediatric Exclusivity granted March 22, 2004 Pediatric Exclusivity granted March 22, 2004 Pediatric Exclusivity granted March 22, 2004
5Drug Use Data Outpatient Prescription Data
Verispan, LLC
- Verispans VONA measures retail dispensing of
prescriptions. Prescriptions are captured from a
sample of approximately 51,000 pharmacies
throughout the U.S. - The pharmacies in the database account for nearly
all retail pharmacies and represent approximately
55 of retail prescriptions dispensed nationwide.
6Drug Use Data Tamiflu
Source Verispan, LLC Vector One National,
Extracted 9-2005,
7Drug Use Data Tamiflu
Source Verispan, LLC Vector One National,
Extracted 9-2005
8Raw Count of Adverse Event Reports for Tamiflu
from approval through April 22, 2005
Age All reports (U.S.) Serious (U.S.) Death (U.S.)
All Ages (includes age not specified) 1184 (514) 1149 (480) 71 (25)
Adults ( 17 years) 778 (291) 764 (278) 58 (23)
Pediatrics (0-16) 190 (28) 190 (28) 12 (0)
Includes duplicate reports
9Raw Count of Adverse Event Reports for Tamiflu
from March 22, 2004 April 22, 2005
Age All reports (U.S.) Serious (U.S.) Death (U.S.)
All Ages (includes age not specified) 349 (37) 342 (30) 23 (3)
Adults ( 17 years) 248 (14) 248 (14) 15 (2)
Pediatrics (0-16) 76 (6) 76 (6) 8 (0)
includes duplicate reports
10Pediatric AE Reports for TamifluMarch 22, 2004
- April 22, 2005
- Total of 75 unduplicated AERS reports
- Location Japan-69, US-5, Canada-1
- 8 Deaths (all from Japan)
- 67 Non-Fatal Reports
- 32 CNS Reports
- 12 Skin/Hypersensitivity Reports
- 23 Other events
- GI-6, musculoskeletal-5, abnormal lab values-4,
vascular-2, infections-2, hypothermia-2,
cardiac-1, overdose-1
11Pediatric Deaths (n12)
- Total of 12 deaths in AERS database eight of
which were reported in the 1-year
post-exclusivity period - 10 males, 2 females
- Mean age 4.4 years
- Age Range 2-14 years
- Relevant Labeling Death is not mentioned and
there were no deaths in clinical trials.
12Source of Pediatric Deaths
- All 12 deaths are from Japan
- Year of Event by Flu Season
- 1999-00 (1), 2001-02 (1), 2002-03 (5), 2003-04
(1), 2004-05 (4) - 4 reports of sudden death from 2002-2003 Flu
season are from a Japanese newspaper article
concerning children that died suddenly in their
sleep.
13Reports of Pediatric Sudden Death and
Cardiopulmonary Arrest
- 2-yr-old healthy male with influenza suddenly
died in his sleep 1-2 days after starting
Tamiflu. Autopsy revealed brain and pulmonary
edema. - 2-yr-old male with asthma and influenza suddenly
died in his sleep 1-2 days after starting
Tamiflu. No autopsy results. - 3-yr-old male with asthma and influenza suddenly
died in his sleep 1-2 days after starting
Tamiflu. Autopsy revealed pulmonary edema.
14Reports of Pediatric Sudden Death and
Cardiopulmonary Arrest (cont)
- 3-yr-old healthy male with influenza suddenly
died in his sleep 1-2 days after starting
Tamiflu. No autopsy results. - 2-yr-old male with influenza and mild
pseudo-croup developed difficulty breathing and
was taken to hospital. En route suffered
cardiopulmonary arrest and died. Encephalopathy
and myocarditis were suspected. Patient received
one dose of Tamiflu. No autopsy was performed. - 4-yr-old female in good general condition was
diagnosed with fever and influenza. She received
one dose of Tamiflu and the next day suddenly
developed cardiopulmonary arrest and died.
15Pediatric Deaths with Confounding Factors and
Limited Information
- 2-yr-old male with multiple medical problems was
diagnosed with influenza and suffered
cardiopulmonary arrest with pulmonary and brain
edema 3 days after starting Tamiflu. He died of
sepsis over 2 months later. - 3-yr-old male was hospitalized in ICU with
encephalopathy. Influenza test was positive so
Tamiflu and amantadine were started. Patient
died 6 weeks later of pneumonia. - 4-yr-old male with fever and suspected influenza
suffered cardiopulmonary arrest and became brain
dead. He died 2 months later, no autopsy.
16Pediatric Deaths with ConfoundingFactors and
Limited Information (cont)
- 5-yr-old female started Tamiflu and cefdinir and
next day developed asphyxiation and vomiting.
Cefdinir was stopped and 3 days later the
Tamiflu was stopped. Died of asphyxiation on
unknown date. - 9-yr-old male with mental retardation, CP, and
methylmalonic acidemia (often with severe
acidosis) was diagnosed with fever and influenza.
Patient developed acute pancreatitis with
cardiopulmonary arrest and died 4 days after
starting Tamiflu.
17Pediatric Deaths with Confounding Factors and
Limited Information (cont)
- Initial AERS report stated that a14-yr-old male
with influenza took one dose of Tamiflu and
took his own life in an hour. Follow-up
information from Roche updated the report to read
that a14-yr-old male with influenza took one dose
of Tamiflu and 2 hours later fell off the 9th
floor of his apartment building. He died of
hemorrhagic shock 5 hours later. No autopsy was
performed. At his clinic visit earlier in the day
he showed no disturbances of consciousness or
mental disorders. There were no witnesses to the
circumstances of his fall. - There is a report in AERS of a death of a
17-yr-old adult patient with a similar clinical
picture. Note that the US definition of
pediatrics is 0-16 years of age.
18Pediatric Deaths Conclusions
- Co-morbidity and confounding factors in many of
the cases. - Limited and missing data in majority of cases
makes if difficult to assess cause of death. - Issues with translated reports and limited access
to follow-up information make interpreting
foreign reports challenging. - At this time, based on available data, it is
difficult to establish a direct causal
relationship between the use of oseltamivir and
the reported deaths.
19Pediatric Serious Skin and Hypersensitivity
Reactions (n12) March 22, 2004 April 22, 2005
- 4 males, 8 females
- Mean age 6 yrs, Range 2-14 yrs
- 3-hospitalizations, 1-life-threatening,
- 8 -medically significant
- Japan-11, US-1
- Type of Reaction
- Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS)-3, SJS/Toxic
epidermal necrolysis (TEN)-1, anaphylaxis/anaphyla
ctoid-3, Erythema multiforme (EM)-2, urticaria-2,
eczema-1
20Relevant Tamiflu Labeling for Serious Skin and
Hypersensitivity Reactions
- Adverse Reactions lists dermatitis under
Treatment Studies in Pediatric Patients (Table 4) - Observed During Clinical Practice for Treatment
(General) lists rash, swelling of the face or
tongue and TEN
21Summary of Pediatric Serious Skin/Hypersensitivi
ty Reactions March 22, 2004 April 22, 2005
- Majority of SJS, TEN, and EM cases were
confounded by concomitant medications. - 3 additional cases had limited information to
adequately assess the adverse event. - However there were 4 notable cases (SJS-1,
anaphylaxis-1 and urticaria-2) from the 1-year
post-exclusivity period. - These cases and cases identified from a review of
adverse events from 2004-05 flu season prompted a
further investigation of all serious skin and
hypersensitivity reports in the AERS database.
22Reports of Serious Skin and Hypersensitivity
Reactions from approval through Apr 22, 2005
Age Serious Skin Anaphylaxis Death
All Ages (includes age not specified) 43 (7 US) 111 (36 US) 11
Adults ( 17 years) 24 86 11
Pediatrics (0-16) 16 18 0
Includes duplicate reports
23Pediatric CNS Events (n32) March 22, 2004
April 22, 2005
- 20 males, 12 females
- Mean age 8 yrs, Range 5 months -15 yrs
- 12-hospitilizations, 2-life-threatening,
1-Disability, 17-medically significant - Japan-31, US-1
24Relevant Tamiflu Labeling for CNS Events
- Observed During Clinical Practice for Treatment
(Neurologic) lists seizure, confusion
25General Categories ofPediatric CNS Events (n32)
- Convulsions (7)
- Depressed level of consciousness (6)
- Visual disturbances and
- hallucinations (5)
- Delirium (4)
- Mixed events(4) tremor, excitability,
somnolence, fontanelle bulging - Abnormal behavior (6)
26CNS Events Example Cases from Abnormal Behavior
Category
- Case 1 hours after the 2nd dose of
oseltamivir, patient jumped from the second floor
of his house. His lower body was deep in snow
he got out of the snow and rang the doorbell and
entered his house. He repeatedly said I am no
half asleep and went back to his room and slept.
He remembered the incident but did not know why
he jumped. - Case 2 patient complained he was suffering
from abnormal look and jumped from upstairs
window of his house - Case 3 patient experienced hallucinations and
showed abnormal behavior. He seemed frightened by
something and rushed outside into the street
27Steps Taken to Address Differential Reporting of
Adverse Events
- Established a working group with representatives
from ODS, OND, OCTAP, and OC. - Requested additional information from Roche
- Obtained a copy of the English version of
Japanese product labeling for oseltamivir - Formally contacted the Japanese Ministry of
Health, Labor, and Welfare (MHLW) for additional
information
28FDA Inquiries to Japanese Regulators
- Have there been reports in pediatric patients of
deaths, CNS toxicity or serious
skin/hypersensitivy reactions with the use
Tamiflu in Japan? Are these labeled events? - Are there differences in the manifestation of
influenza in Japanese patients, especially
regarding CNS or neurological effects? Could
these adverse events be due to disease
(influenza) vs. drug?
29FDA Inquiries to Japanese Regulators cont.
- How is Tamiflu prescribed to pediatric patients
in Japan? - How are adverse events reported in Japan?
- What is the usage data of Tamiflu in Japan? If
there is increased use of Tamiflu in Japan,
could it be resulting in a potential early safety
signal that has not been seen in US pediatric
patients?
30Japanese Response to FDA Inquiries
- In Japans Tamiflu label, shock, anaphylactoid/
serious skin reactions, and psychoneurological
symptoms are labeled under PRECAUTIONS/Adverse
Reactions/Clinically significant adverse
reactions. - Influenza-associated encephalopathy has been a
concern in Japan for over a decade. - There is widespread use of test kits for
influenza and awareness to treat influenza early
especially in pediatrics. - Mass media reports of positive effects of Tamiflu
31Japanese Response to FDA Inquiries
- Increased postmarketing surveillance in Japan
that coincided with US post-exclusivity period
retrospective study (2003-2004) to evaluate CNS
effect in infants (lt 1 yr of age). - Tamiflu is readily available in Japan resulting
in tremendous use compared to US. - Prescriptions for 2001-2005 (all ages)
- Approximately 24.5M (Japan) vs. 6.5M (US)
- Prescriptions for 2001-2005 ( 16 years)
- Approximately 11.6M (Japan) vs. 872,386 (US)
- (Source Nov. 18th Pediatric Advisory Committee
Executive Summary for Tamiflu prepared by
Hoffman-La Roche)
32Summary
- US adverse event reports do not show deaths or
comparable CNS effects in the pediatric age
group as seen in the Japanese data. - Serious skin/hypersensitivity reactions for
adults and pediatrics are currently under review
by ODS. - CDER will continue to closely monitor all serious
adverse event reports for oseltamivir. - FDA will continue to meet with CDC for the
2005-2006 flu season to discuss serious U.S.
adverse events with antivirals used to treat
influenza.
33Acknowledgements
- Evelyne Edwards, Pharm.D.
- Rosemary Johann-Liang, M.D.
- David Moeny, R.Ph.