
EMA Excellence in Pharmacovigilance: Clinical Trials and Post-Marketing Training Course
Date(s) And Time(s):
Feb 13 2012 8:00AM - Feb 17 2012 3:30PM
Location:
European Medicines Agency
Canary Wharf, 7 Westferry Circus
London
E14 4HB
United Kingdom
Interest Area(s):
Clinical Safety/Pharmacovigilance,Regulatory Affairs
Overview:
This course is designed to provide a firm grounding in key aspects of Global Clinical Pre and Post Marketing Safety. This five-day training course, presented by the European Medicines Agency, is now also including highlights and updates on the implementation of the new pharmacovigilance legislation and the latest news on the international harmonisation and standardisation activities in pharmacovigilance.
DEFINITIONS AND METHODS IN PHARMACOVIGILANCE (TOPIC 1)
Topic 1 will provide a concise overview of the objectives and the scope of Pharmacovigilance and Risk Management and the relationship between the two concepts. The development of key definitions based on Community legislation and consensus fora such as the International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use and the CIOMS Working Groups will be summarised. Practical examples and exercises will be used to illustrate the key definitions and vocabulary applied in Pharmacovigilance.
REGULATORY ASPECTS IN PHARMACOVIGILANCE AND PRACTICAL EXAMPLES (TOPIC 2)
The roles and responsibilities of marketing authorisation holders and national Competent Authorities in the conduct of Pharmacovigilance are defined in Community legislation and further detailed in Volume 9A of the ‘Rules Governing Medicinal Products in the European Union and Guidelines on Pharmacovigilance for Medicinal Products for Human Use’. Topic 2 will provide a concise summary of the adverse reaction reporting requirements of marketing authorisation holders in the post-authorisation phase and illustrations based on practical case studies.
Furthermore, the roles and responsibilities of sponsors of interventional clinical trials in line with the implementing texts published in relation to Directive 2001/20/EC are summarised.
Taking into account the international dimension of Pharmacovigilance, the session will further address key differences in the regulatory environment of the US and Japan. Aspects that need to be taken into account in establishing a Pharmacovigilance database, the use of MedDRA as well as the key functionalities of the EU’s EudraVigilance system and the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS) will be discussed.
The main elements will be provided for the establishment of quality system assurance in Pharmacovigilance including aspects of good Pharmacovigilance practices, the elaboration of Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) and the preparation for audits and inspections.
DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT OF ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS (TOPIC 3)
Pharmacovigilance is first based on the medical assessment of the adverse events passively or actively collected in organised schemes. It is then essential to be able to identify consistently the nature of events, their seriousness, their expectedness and to assess causality with the suspect drug(s). This session will provide clues for the recognition of two serious events involving target organs of drug toxicity.
SIGNAL DETECTION (TOPIC 4)
New safety signals may emerge at any time following product launch and must be evaluated for relative risk, medical importance, and likelihood of occurrence. This session will provide an understanding of safety data classification and approaches to signal detection using traditional and quantitative methods.
RISK MANAGEMENT (TOPIC 5)
In accordance with the European Guideline on Risk Management System, risk management plans (RMPs) are now submitted by companies to propose activities aiming to identify, characterise or minimise risks associated with medicinal products. Given the potential public health implications and costs of such interventions, RMPs should be based on robust epidemiological methods. This session aims to provide the background for understanding drug-related risks, to review epidemiological methods for detecting signals and assessing risks, and to present recent developments regarding risk communication.
Learning Objectives:
For the five key topics as outlined below, the learning objectives now also include the ability to:
- Describe the main changes to the business processes in the context of the new pharmacovigilance legislation
- Discuss the latest developments in the area of international harmonisation and standardisation with main focus on the ICH E2B, E2C, E2F topics and the ISO Identification of Medicinal Products (IDMP) standards
DEFINITIONS AND METHODS IN PHARMACOVIGILANCE (TOPIC 1)
- Describe the scope and objectives of Pharmacovigilance and Risk Management and the relationship between the two concepts
- Discuss the development of definitions based on legislation and consensus fora
- Identify the key definitions and the vocabulary used in Pharmacovigilance in the European Union, illustrated by practical examples and exercises
REGULATORY ASPECTS IN PHARMACOVIGILANCE AND PRACTICAL EXAMPLES (TOPIC 2)
- Describe the European regulatory requirements in Pharmacovigilance
- Identify the key differences to regulatory requirements in the US and Japan taking into account the international dimension of Pharmacovigilance
- Describe the requirements of establishing a Pharmacovigilance database and the use of MedDRA including the key functionalities of EudraVigilance and AERS
- Discuss good Pharmacovigilance practices and the preparation for audits and inspections
DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT OF ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS (TOPIC 3)
- Discuss the key elements of the medical evaluation of adverse events
- Recognise the important aspects in evaluating adverse events based on the main system organ classes
- Identify the main characteristics of drug induced adverse events
SIGNAL DETECTION (TOPIC 4)
- Understand MedDRA dictionary
- Describe signal detection and management in the EU
RISK MANAGEMENT (TOPIC 5)
- Explain the EU risk management strategy, the new approaches to risk assessment and prevention, and the different steps to be considered in the risk management process
- Describe the components of the EU Guideline on the risk management system, focussing on Pharmacovigilance and risk minimisation plans
- Define the concept of risk, and explain differences between individual and population risks
- Explain and illustrate methods used in pharmacoepidemiology for measuring risks and estimating their association with drug exposure
- Describe current recommendations and practices of benefit-risk assessment, review methods for quantitative benefit-risk analysis and discuss their practical application in decision making
Target Audience:
Intermediate Level
Professionals involved in pharmacovigilance, clinical research, regulatory affairs, risk management, medical product safety assessment, and data analysis, epidemiology, labelling, quality assurance, compliance, medical information.
Event Code:
12551
Contact Information:
DIA Europe
ELISABETHENANLAGE 25, POSTFACH
4002 BASEL
SWITZERLAND
TEL.: +41 61 225 51 51
FAX: +41 61 225 51 52
E-MAIL:
Этот e-mail адрес защищен от спам-ботов, для его просмотра у Вас должен быть включен Javascript
Информация взята с сайта http://www.diahome.org/DIAHome/Education/FindEducationalOffering.aspx?productID=27702&eventType=Training%20Course

















