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1.
J Pharm Technol ; 40(2): 112-117, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38525093

RESUMO

Nivolumab is used to treat several different types of cancers. Although it is generally considered to be effective and well-tolerated, it has been associated with adverse effects requiring discontinuation of treatment, like many other drugs used for cancer. A 70-year-old male was switched from sunitinib to nivolumab for renal cell carcinoma. The patient developed persistent hypothyroidism, onycholysis, and pneumonitis at nivolumab cycle 6, 10, and 11, respectively. Using the Naranjo causality method, the likelihood of causality was deemed "probable" for pneumonitis and hypothyroidism and "possible" for onycholysis. Nivolumab was eventually discontinued due to disease progression, rather than safety concerns. Eudravigilance, the European pharmacovigilance database, was searched for all nivolumab-related individual case safety reports from Malta, up to September 4, 2023. Six reports were identified in Malta, although the 3 events identified in this case report were not reported, suggesting under-reporting in Malta. This case report identified an uncommon nivolumab adverse drug reaction (ADR), onycholysis and showed how, despite the occurrence of 3 ADRs, it was its lack of efficacy rather than its safety which led to its discontinuation in this particular patient.

2.
Int J Risk Saf Med ; 2024 May 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38820023

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Understanding knowledge and attitudes of health care professionals (HCPs) towards adverse drug reaction (ADR) reporting can inform educational interventions promoting ADR reporting. OBJECTIVE: To explore knowledge, attitudes, practice, and barriers of local HCPs towards ADR reporting. METHODS: Focus groups involving HCPs from different settings were organized to help develop a questionnaire. The questionnaire was validated and disseminated to pharmacists, physicians, dentists and nurses practicing in Malta. A review of ADR reports reported in Malta from 2004 to 2021 was carried out to contextualise questionnaire findings. RESULTS: Overall, HCPs (n = 374) had good knowledge on pharmacovigilance and a positive attitude towards ADR reporting however nurses were found to be less knowledgeable than physicians, dentists, and pharmacists. The main barrier for not reporting ADRs was difficulty to understand whether an adverse event occurred (n = 187). A total of 2581 ADR reports were reported in Malta. Among HCPs, physicians and dentists reported most ADRs (1060 reports), followed by pharmacists (307 reports) and nurses (257 reports). CONCLUSION: Further ADR educational and promotional efforts are needed to increase awareness on the importance of quality ADR reporting and increase the number of ADR reports reported by local HCPs.

3.
Ther Adv Rare Dis ; 4: 26330040231213888, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38116207

RESUMO

To date, there is no published overview of the drug pipeline in granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA), a rare disease. The aim of this study was to identify clinical trials from two study repositories. A review of clinical trials was conducted using publicly available data. Clinicaltrials.gov and International Clinical Trials Registry Platform were searched from inception until 25 September 2022. Only GPA-specific studies were included; these were described in detail. A total of 137 studies were identified in the trial repositories, of which 108 (79%) studies were found to concern GPA. Of these 108 studies, 67 enrolled GPA patients to investigate pharmacotherapy in this disease (62%). Most studies included all severity types (n = 51; 76%); the scope of almost half of the studies was remission induction (n = 33; 49%). The drug class which was by the most widely investigated in trials was the non-corticosteroid immunosuppressant drug class (46; 68.7%), monoclonal antibodies (32; 47.8%), and corticosteroids (31; 46.3%). There is a need for more GPA trials to generate evidence on effectiveness in terms of severity-specificity and maintenance of remission.


The pharmacological treatment of granulomatosis with polyangiitis: a review of clinical trials To date, there is no published overview of the drug pipeline in granulomatosis with polyangiitis (referred to in this paper as GPA), a rare disease. The aim of this study was to identify such studies from two study archives. Clinicaltrials.gov and International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP) were searched from inception until 25th September 2022. Studies recruiting GPA patients were included; these were described in detail. A total of 137 studies were identified in the trial repositories, of which 108 were found to concern GPA. Of these 108 studies, 67 enrolled GPA patients to investigate the treatment of this disease through the administration of drugs. Most studies included all severity types (n = 51); the scope of almost half of the studies was to induce remission (n = 33). The drug classes which were the most widely investigated in trials were non-corticosteroid immunosuppressant drugs (n = 46), monoclonal antibodies (n = 32), and corticosteroids (n = 31). There is a need for more GPA clinical trials to generate evidence on effectiveness of drugs in terms of severity-specificity and maintenance of remission.

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