Title: Pharmacovigilance, the MHRA and Yellow Cards
1Pharmacovigilance, the MHRA and Yellow Cards
- http//yellowcard.mhra.gov.uk
- Aileen McKennaSenior Clinical Pharmacist
2Role of the
- to enhance and safeguard the health of the public
by ensuring that medicines and medical devices
work, and are acceptably safe. - http//www.mhra.gov.uk/Aboutus/Whoweare/index.htm
3A little of the history
- CSD established 1963
- Yellow cards introduced 1964
- CSD became CSM 1970
- 1976 Black triangle scheme introduced
4How many patients with suspected ADRs have you
seen in the last month?
- None
- 1-5
- 6-10
- 11-15
- More than 15
5How many of the ADRs would you class as serious?
- None
- 1-5
- 6-10
- 11-15
- More than 15
6How many were recorded in the patients notes or
drug chart?
- None
- 1-5
- 6-10
- 11-15
- More than 15
7How many of these did you report on a Yellow Card?
- None
- 1-5
- 6-10
- 11-15
- More than 15
8Yellow Cards
- Used to report adverse effects (or suspected
adverse effects) to drugs
9Who can fill in a Yellow Card?
- Any healthcare professional
- A doctor
- A nurse
- A pharmacist
- Any patient
10What information should be given on a report?
- Any information you can
- The more information the better
- As a minimum
- The ADR and the suspected medicine
- Patients initials, age or sex
- Your name and address
11What to do if you suspect a patient has had a
side effect
- Remember to get more than the minimum!
- Take a full and complete drug history
- Not just a list of the drugs
- Take a full and complete reaction history
- When it started, when it ended, lasting effects
etc - If possible, get batch numbers of medication
- especially for biologics and vaccines
12Where can they be found and completed?
In the back of every BNF
Online at http//yellowcard.mhra.gov.uk
OR
13When should you fill one in?
- As soon as you can!
- Any time the reaction is significant/serious
- E.g. results in hospital admission, prolongs
admission, Is fatal or life threatening. - Where the drug is new and still closely monitored
by the MHRA (? drugs) - For ANY drug licensed, unlicensed, herbal,
vaccines, and off-label - For ANY reaction in a child to any medicine
14Why bother?
- Around 6.5 of hospital admissions are ADR
related - Costs the NHS around 466 million per year
- More than that it can cost lives.
- But less than 10 are reported
- Revalidation
- The MHRA website keeps all your Yellow Cards on
file - Competencies
15So, what happens to the information?
- You get a report on what you have filled in
- You may be asked for further information
- Continually analysed by the MHRA
- Its published in the form of
- Drug Safety Updates
- Drug Analysis Prints
- Safety Reports
- Alerts
- May result in withdrawal from the market (e.g.
rosiglitazone), restrictions on use (e.g.
thalidomide) and increased awareness of similar
drugs (e.g. COX 2 inhibitors)
16- MHRA recommendations since 2008
17Drug Analysis Prints
- Available for every licensed drug on the market
- Includes
- every report of side effects
- Total number of reports
- How long those reports have been gathered over
18Drug Safety Updates
- Published monthly with updated safety data
- Warnings and precautions for use
- Can sign up for alerts and emails
19CPD modules
20- http//www.mhra.gov.uk/ConferencesLearningCentre/L
earningCentre/Medicineslearningmodules/Pharmacovig
ilancelearningmodule/pharmacovigilancelearningmodu
le/index.htm
21Other resources that might be useful
- Others
- Safeprescriber.org (SCRIPT) Under Managing the
Risks of prescribing then Adverse Drug
Reactions - Drug Safety Research Unit - http//www.dsru.org/le
arningmodule/index.php - European Medicines Agency - http//www.ema.europa.
eu
22Quiz time!
23Which one of the following must be reported on a
yellow card?
- Skin reaction from betamethasone 0.0025 cream
leading to a switch in treatment - Constipation with morphine sulphate, treated by
the GP with lactulose and senna - Drowsiness with chlorphenamine tablets, used PRN
to treat hayfever - GI bleed with aspirin requiring hospital
admission and treated with IV omeprazole
24Which one of the following must be reported on a
yellow card?
- Skin reaction from betamethasone 0.0025 cream
leading to a switch in treatment - Constipation with morphine sulphate, treated by
the GP with lactulose and senna - Drowsiness with chlorphenamine tablets, used PRN
to treat hayfever - GI bleed with aspirin requiring hospital
admission and treatment with IV omeprazole
25Which one of the following must be reported on a
yellow card?
- Facial flushing in a 36 year old patient taking
amlodipine for hypertension - Flu-like symptoms in a 78 year old patient after
annual flu vaccination - Indigestion in a 56 year old patient taking
alendronate for osteoporosis requiring a change
in therapy. - Oral candidiasis in an 18 year old patient using
a Seretide evohaler for asthma
26Which one of the following must be reported on a
yellow card?
- Facial flushing in a 36 year old patient taking
amlodipine for hypertension - Flu-like symptoms in a 78 year old patient after
annual flu vaccination - Indigestion in a 56 year old patient taking
alendronate for osteoporosis requiring a change
in therapy. - Oral candidiasis in an 18 year old patient using
a Seretide evohaler for asthma
27What information is not essential on a yellow
card?
- 1. The suspected side effect(s).
- 2. The patients initials, sex, or age at the
time of the side effect. - 3. The name of the medicine(s) thought to have
caused the side effect(s). - 4. The batch number(s) of the medicine(s) thought
to have caused the side effect(s). - 5. The reporters name and address.
28What information is not essential on a yellow
card?
- 1. The suspected side effect(s).
- 2. The patients initials, sex, or age at the
time of the side effect. - 3. The name of the medicine(s) thought to have
caused the side effect(s). - 4. The batch number(s) of the medicine(s) thought
to have caused the side effect(s). - 5. The reporters name and address.
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