Layal El Aridi, Hélène Jantzem, André Happe, Jean Michel Cauvin, Dominique Carlhant-Kowalski, Greta Gourier
{"title":"[HOPIPRAC:在医院数据仓库中检测不良事件病例的药物警戒界面]。","authors":"Layal El Aridi, Hélène Jantzem, André Happe, Jean Michel Cauvin, Dominique Carlhant-Kowalski, Greta Gourier","doi":"10.1016/j.therap.2025.02.002","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Spontaneous reporting is the reference method for collecting data on adverse drug reactions (ADRs). However, it remains insufficient. Text search in the electronic medical record has opened up a new way of collecting ADRs. However, these methods have certain limitations. Data warehouses constitute a rich digital environment bringing together all the informations in an electronic medical record. The Clinical Data Centre (CDC) at Brest University Hospital has developed a pharmacovigilance tool, the HOPIPRAC interface, which provides autonomy in querying the entire hospital database to detect cases of suspected ADRs from computerised patient records.</p><p><strong>Method: </strong>The data source used was the CHU de Brest data warehouse. The IT tool was developed and tested between 2015 and 2018. A validation test of the tool was proposed, based on the choice of a positive signal from Brest's previous experience (valvulopathy with Benfluorex). The hospital data warehouse query tool can also be used to carry out other forms of interrogation to identify new risks, particularly with new drugs on the market, such as Nivolumab. The tool was tested to identify and analyse bullous toxidermia, described as the most severe and very often of a drug origin.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The validation test identified 98% of the historical cases recorded in the national pharmacovigilance database, as well as potential new cases not reported to the Brest CRPV. The nivolumab cohort identified 34 ADR cases. Of these cases, 82% were serious and some were unexpected at the time of extraction. The toxidermia query identified 137 cases, 56% of which had not been reported to the Brest CRPV. With regard to Stevens Johnson Syndrome (SJS), 28% of cases were associated with antineoplastics (7 cases), in particular tyrosine kinase inhibitors (sorafenib, vemurafenib, regorafenib) derived from advanced therapies, although this risk is described as rare in the summaries of product characteristics for these 3 drugs.</p><p><strong>Discussion: </strong>The HOPIPRAC interface is an innovative IT tool for assessing drug safety. It gives pharmacovigilants independent access to electronic hospital medical data. Its applications are: 1- amplification of a pharmacovigilance signal obtained by spontaneous notification; 2- monitoring of adverse reactions in cohorts of patients exposed to a specific drug; and 3- mapping of certain drug toxicities within hospital data. However, a number of limitations has been identified: the difficulty of identifying rare adverse events due to the low population representativeness of the surveyed warehouse, and the absence of certain data relevant to the exploration of adverse drug reactions.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>The HOPIPRAC interface gives pharmacovigilants autonomy in monitoring drug risk in healthcare institutions, in addition to spontaneous notification. Querying a more advanced warehouse that collects multimodal data, and deploying it on a wider regional or even national scale, will help to overcome some of the limitations of the current warehouse.</p>","PeriodicalId":23147,"journal":{"name":"Therapie","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"[HOPIPRAC: Pharmacovigilance interface for detecting cases of adverse events in a hospital data warehouse].\",\"authors\":\"Layal El Aridi, Hélène Jantzem, André Happe, Jean Michel Cauvin, Dominique Carlhant-Kowalski, Greta Gourier\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.therap.2025.02.002\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Spontaneous reporting is the reference method for collecting data on adverse drug reactions (ADRs). However, it remains insufficient. Text search in the electronic medical record has opened up a new way of collecting ADRs. However, these methods have certain limitations. Data warehouses constitute a rich digital environment bringing together all the informations in an electronic medical record. The Clinical Data Centre (CDC) at Brest University Hospital has developed a pharmacovigilance tool, the HOPIPRAC interface, which provides autonomy in querying the entire hospital database to detect cases of suspected ADRs from computerised patient records.</p><p><strong>Method: </strong>The data source used was the CHU de Brest data warehouse. The IT tool was developed and tested between 2015 and 2018. A validation test of the tool was proposed, based on the choice of a positive signal from Brest's previous experience (valvulopathy with Benfluorex). The hospital data warehouse query tool can also be used to carry out other forms of interrogation to identify new risks, particularly with new drugs on the market, such as Nivolumab. The tool was tested to identify and analyse bullous toxidermia, described as the most severe and very often of a drug origin.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The validation test identified 98% of the historical cases recorded in the national pharmacovigilance database, as well as potential new cases not reported to the Brest CRPV. The nivolumab cohort identified 34 ADR cases. Of these cases, 82% were serious and some were unexpected at the time of extraction. The toxidermia query identified 137 cases, 56% of which had not been reported to the Brest CRPV. With regard to Stevens Johnson Syndrome (SJS), 28% of cases were associated with antineoplastics (7 cases), in particular tyrosine kinase inhibitors (sorafenib, vemurafenib, regorafenib) derived from advanced therapies, although this risk is described as rare in the summaries of product characteristics for these 3 drugs.</p><p><strong>Discussion: </strong>The HOPIPRAC interface is an innovative IT tool for assessing drug safety. It gives pharmacovigilants independent access to electronic hospital medical data. Its applications are: 1- amplification of a pharmacovigilance signal obtained by spontaneous notification; 2- monitoring of adverse reactions in cohorts of patients exposed to a specific drug; and 3- mapping of certain drug toxicities within hospital data. However, a number of limitations has been identified: the difficulty of identifying rare adverse events due to the low population representativeness of the surveyed warehouse, and the absence of certain data relevant to the exploration of adverse drug reactions.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>The HOPIPRAC interface gives pharmacovigilants autonomy in monitoring drug risk in healthcare institutions, in addition to spontaneous notification. Querying a more advanced warehouse that collects multimodal data, and deploying it on a wider regional or even national scale, will help to overcome some of the limitations of the current warehouse.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":23147,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Therapie\",\"volume\":\" \",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.2000,\"publicationDate\":\"2025-02-08\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Therapie\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1016/j.therap.2025.02.002\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Therapie","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1016/j.therap.2025.02.002","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
简介:自发报告是收集药物不良反应(adr)数据的参考方法。然而,这仍然不够。电子病历的文本检索为adr的收集开辟了一条新的途径。然而,这些方法有一定的局限性。数据仓库构成了一个丰富的数字环境,将电子病历中的所有信息汇集在一起。布雷斯特大学医院的临床数据中心(CDC)开发了一种药物警戒工具HOPIPRAC接口,它提供了查询整个医院数据库的自主权,从而从计算机化的患者记录中发现疑似adr病例。方法:使用的数据源为CHU de Brest数据仓库。该IT工具是在2015年至2018年期间开发和测试的。根据Brest以往的经验(Benfluorex的瓣膜病变)选择阳性信号,提出了该工具的验证测试。医院数据仓库查询工具还可用于进行其他形式的查询,以识别新的风险,特别是市场上的新药,如Nivolumab。测试了该工具来识别和分析大疱性氧化症,这被描述为最严重的,通常是由药物引起的。结果:验证试验确定了国家药物警戒数据库中记录的98%的历史病例,以及未报告给布列斯特CRPV的潜在新病例。纳武单抗队列确定了34例ADR病例。在这些病例中,82%是严重的,有些在拔牙时是意想不到的。氧化血症查询确定了137例,其中56%未向布雷斯特CRPV报告。关于史蒂文斯·约翰逊综合征(SJS), 28%的病例与抗肿瘤药物(7例)相关,特别是酪氨酸激酶抑制剂(索拉非尼、vemurafenib、瑞戈非尼)来源于先进的治疗方法,尽管在这3种药物的产品特性摘要中,这种风险被描述为罕见的。讨论:HOPIPRAC接口是一种创新的评估药物安全性的IT工具。它使药物警戒人员能够独立访问电子医院医疗数据。它的应用有:1-通过自发通知放大药物警戒信号;2-监测暴露于特定药物的患者群体的不良反应;3 .医院数据中某些药物毒性的映射。然而,已经确定了一些限制:由于调查仓库的人口代表性低,难以识别罕见的不良事件,以及缺乏与药物不良反应探索相关的某些数据。结论:HOPIPRAC接口使药物警戒人员在监测医疗机构药物风险时,除了自发通报外,还具有自主权。查询收集多模式数据的更先进的仓库,并将其部署在更广泛的区域甚至全国范围内,将有助于克服当前仓库的一些限制。
[HOPIPRAC: Pharmacovigilance interface for detecting cases of adverse events in a hospital data warehouse].
Introduction: Spontaneous reporting is the reference method for collecting data on adverse drug reactions (ADRs). However, it remains insufficient. Text search in the electronic medical record has opened up a new way of collecting ADRs. However, these methods have certain limitations. Data warehouses constitute a rich digital environment bringing together all the informations in an electronic medical record. The Clinical Data Centre (CDC) at Brest University Hospital has developed a pharmacovigilance tool, the HOPIPRAC interface, which provides autonomy in querying the entire hospital database to detect cases of suspected ADRs from computerised patient records.
Method: The data source used was the CHU de Brest data warehouse. The IT tool was developed and tested between 2015 and 2018. A validation test of the tool was proposed, based on the choice of a positive signal from Brest's previous experience (valvulopathy with Benfluorex). The hospital data warehouse query tool can also be used to carry out other forms of interrogation to identify new risks, particularly with new drugs on the market, such as Nivolumab. The tool was tested to identify and analyse bullous toxidermia, described as the most severe and very often of a drug origin.
Results: The validation test identified 98% of the historical cases recorded in the national pharmacovigilance database, as well as potential new cases not reported to the Brest CRPV. The nivolumab cohort identified 34 ADR cases. Of these cases, 82% were serious and some were unexpected at the time of extraction. The toxidermia query identified 137 cases, 56% of which had not been reported to the Brest CRPV. With regard to Stevens Johnson Syndrome (SJS), 28% of cases were associated with antineoplastics (7 cases), in particular tyrosine kinase inhibitors (sorafenib, vemurafenib, regorafenib) derived from advanced therapies, although this risk is described as rare in the summaries of product characteristics for these 3 drugs.
Discussion: The HOPIPRAC interface is an innovative IT tool for assessing drug safety. It gives pharmacovigilants independent access to electronic hospital medical data. Its applications are: 1- amplification of a pharmacovigilance signal obtained by spontaneous notification; 2- monitoring of adverse reactions in cohorts of patients exposed to a specific drug; and 3- mapping of certain drug toxicities within hospital data. However, a number of limitations has been identified: the difficulty of identifying rare adverse events due to the low population representativeness of the surveyed warehouse, and the absence of certain data relevant to the exploration of adverse drug reactions.
Conclusion: The HOPIPRAC interface gives pharmacovigilants autonomy in monitoring drug risk in healthcare institutions, in addition to spontaneous notification. Querying a more advanced warehouse that collects multimodal data, and deploying it on a wider regional or even national scale, will help to overcome some of the limitations of the current warehouse.
期刊介绍:
Thérapie is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to Clinical Pharmacology, Therapeutics, Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacovigilance, Addictovigilance, Social Pharmacology, Pharmacoepidemiology, Pharmacoeconomics and Evidence-Based-Medicine. Thérapie publishes in French or in English original articles, general reviews, letters to the editor reporting original findings, correspondence relating to articles or letters published in the Journal, short articles, editorials on up-to-date topics, Pharmacovigilance or Addictovigilance reports that follow the French "guidelines" concerning good practice in pharmacovigilance publications. The journal also publishes thematic issues on topical subject.
The journal is indexed in the main international data bases and notably in: Biosis Previews/Biological Abstracts, Embase/Excerpta Medica, Medline/Index Medicus, Science Citation Index.