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Training and Capacity Building in PV: Private and Public Partnerships

Training and Capacity Building in PV: Private and Public Partnerships. Paul S. Lalvani Director and Dean Empower Health Vision for sustainable pv in india Lhmc , new delhi , nov 27, 2010. Background on PV. Sources of risks and prevention.

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Training and Capacity Building in PV: Private and Public Partnerships

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  1. Training and Capacity Building in PV:Private and Public Partnerships Paul S. Lalvani Director and Dean Empower Health Vision for sustainable pv in india Lhmc, new delhi, nov 27, 2010

  2. Background on PV

  3. Sources of risks and prevention

  4. Benefit – Risk balance : acceptance and optimization RISK High Unacceptable Risk Manageable Risk Acceptable Risk Low BENEFIT Low High

  5. (S)ADR impact in post-marketing ? During the last decade more than 20 drugs withdrawn from the market

  6. Importance of HR and Capacity Building

  7. Importance of HR and Capacity Building People are the most important asset of any organization • RIGHT People • RIGHT People in the RIGHT POSITIONS • RIGHT People in the RIGHT POSITIONS with the right TRAINING

  8. However Demand for PV Specialists > Supply The supply-demand situation for skilled manpower [in pharmacovigilance] is highly skewed in favor of the demand * Why Demand is growing so rapidly: • New regulations on pharmacovigilance in India and many countries • Launch of the PvPI – pan India • Non harmonized regulatory requirements for pharmacovigilance • Enforcement of pharmacovigilance by NDRAs • Threat of penalties for non compliance • Increased awareness of patient safety issues among patient population • Several companies have a large (many drugs) and multi-country portfolio, requiring a complex system of pharmacovigilance management *Training in Post-Authorization Pharmacovigilance

  9. However, Supply continues to Lag Several factors limit supply • This field is relatively new in India and elsewhere • Manpower with long-term experience and wide exposure to the science of pharmacovigilance limited • Not a well established academic specialization • Very few universities and Institutes offer specialized courses in PV • Spans a wide range of subjects • Pharmacology, epidemiology, clinical medicine, data management, drug legislation &communication • Multi-discipline approach does not easily fit within the competence area of the existing academic departments

  10. Syllabus Topics Taught by Empower • The Need for Pharmacovigilance • Drug Related problems in health care • Clinical manifestations of ADRs • The practice of spontaneous reporting • Epidemiological methods (DUR, CEM, etc) • Regulatory requirements • Literature sources for drug safety • Special areas (AEFIs, counterfeit, ethics, etc) • Benefit – harm assessment and decision making • Communicating drug risks in pharmacovigilance (with HP, patients, regulatory bodies) • Risk Management (preventing ADRs) • Statistics and softwares in pharmacovigilance • Drug safety data management • Starting and managing a pharmacovigilance department in a company (pharma/ CRO) • Compliance with and inspections of pharmacovigilance

  11. Combining Public and Private Sector Leader • PV capacity in private sector exceeds public / academic sector • PV in private sector is responding to international requirements and has scaled up their capacity • Leveraging private sector to building capacity of academic and public sector is valuable • In US-EU, private sector works closely with public and academic sectors (while managing conflict of interest)

  12. Combining Indian and International Leaders • PV in India is less than 10 years old—few people have worked in PV for more than 2-3 years • PV in developed countries and WHO /UMC has been conducted for 40 years • Leveraging international expertise is important to building Indian capacity • UMC/WHO/US FDA / EMA are all providing support in India

  13. Pharmacovigilance framework

  14. Pharmacovigilance framework

  15. Pharmacovigilance framework

  16. Pharmacovigilance framework

  17. The Pharmacovigilance Process Flow

  18. The Pharmacovigilance Process Flow

  19. The Pharmacovigilance Process Flow

  20. The Pharmacovigilance Process Flow

  21. Continuum of PV Capacity Emerging Advanced Rudimentary Japan US FDA Europe Bangladesh Nepal Pakistan India Korea Singapore China Precautionary/ Proactive eg: EMA Preventative / Reactive e.g. FDA Source: Adapted from: Lee Ann Patterson, Tim Josling. Regulating Biotechnology. Paper to 76th WEAI, July 8, 2001

  22. Organizations requiring PV specialists • Healthcare professionals ( physicians, dentist, pharmacist, nurses, etc) • Pharmaceutical companies • Drug regulatory authorities • BPOs • KPOs • CROs • ADR monitoring centers/ hospitals

  23. About Empower School of Health

  24. Empower Health and pharmacovigilance education • UGC certified PG diploma specialized in pharmacovigilance ; 1 year course • UGC certified MSc in CR and pharmacovigilance ; 2 year course • More than 50% of our first year batch is joining pharmacovigilance (including conducting international projects in Switzerland) • Content and teaching is conducted in collaboration with Uppsala Monitoring Centre and India pharmacovigilance experts (academia and industry) • Expanding from Delhi to 4 other cities in India

  25. Dr. N K Ganguly Former-Director General, Indian Council of Medical Research Prof. Paul Lalvani Director, Empower Dr. Rita Karia CEO and President Clini Rx CRO Mr. Rajiv Sharma MD, Empower Academic Advisory Council Dr. V K Singh Director IIHMR-Delhi Dr. Ross Alexander Breckenridge University CollegeLondon Dr. Chandrashekhar Potkar Director, Medical & Regulatory Affairs, Pfizer The advisory council, a body of distinguished persons from academia and industry, provides strategic guidance to the programme.

  26. Collaborating partners for content, teaching & certification The 118 year old University College London is ranked seventh by Times Higher Education –QS World University rankings 2008, ahead of MIT, John Hopkins and Stanford. It works across the globe with government, educational institutions, industrial, and professional organizations and has an enviable record of ground breaking research. World Class Collaborators Based in Sweden, Uppsala Monitoring Centre is an independent centre of scientific excellence and is the field name of World Health Organization (WHO) collaborating centre for international drug monitoring. Set up in 1978, eighty two countries currently actively contribute to its database.

  27. Breckenridge, Prof. Ross Alexander MBBS, PhD University of Cambridge, Clinical Pharmacology/General Medicine Consultant Physician; Senior Lecturer in Clinical Pharmacology at University College London. Responsible for M Sc program in Drug Development at UCL; Chair, Clinical trials Safety Committee, University College London Research and Drug Development Edwards, Prof. Ivor Ralph Former Director, Uppsala Monitoring Centre, Sweden; Physician; Teacher at undergraduate and graduate levels; As clinical toxicologist in the fi eld of drug abuse, acute and chronic poisoning, toxicity from industrial chemicals and adverse drug reactions; Medical Assessor for Adverse Drug Reactions, Ministry of Health New Zealand Lindquist, Prof. Marie Marie Lindquist is an M.Sci in pharmacy, Uppsala University, Sweden, and a Doctor in Medicine, the University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands. Currently she is the Director, Uppsala Monitoring Centre, Sweden and has overall responsibility for the development and scientific and professional activities of the Centre, matters relating to the WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring, and relationships with other organisations. Hugman, Prof. Bruce International Communication Expert. Consultant, Uppsala Monitoring Centre Faculty International Dodoo, Alexander, Prof. MSc and Ph.D at the Department of Pharmacy, King’s College London. UK Senior Research Fellow and the Acting Director at the Centre for Tropical Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (CTCPT) of the University of Ghana Medical School.. Established the Ghana National Centre for Pharmacovigilance in 2001, the fi rst such centre in West Africa. Burri, Prof. Christian Head of Department for Pharmaceutical Medicine of the Swiss Tropical Institute. Direction of Unit conducting several projects in the field of drug and vaccine testing executed by the STI. Project Director of the Alliance for Clinical Research & Clinical Epidemiology in the Democratic Republic of Congo (ARCEAU-RDC). Associate professor for pharmacy & clinical pharmacology with research focus on human African trypanosomiasis medication pharmacology. Olsson, Mr. Sten Chief WHO Programme Officer, WHO International Uppsala Monitoring Center, Sweden. MSc Pharmacy (University of Uppsala, Sweden). Responsible for development of the WHO medicine safety programme and pharmacovigilance around the globe. Carried out pharmacovigilance training in more than 35 countries in 5 continents. Editor of the book ‘National Pharmacovigilance Systems’ (2nd ed 1999) and the newsletter Uppsala Reports Pietrobon, Prof. Ricardo Associate Professor & Vice Chair, Dept. of Surgery, Duke University Medical Centre, USA MS, PhD, Masters in Business Management. Director Research on Research Group, Duke NUS Graduate Medical School, Singapore; Orthopedic Surgeon

  28. International Faculty and Visitors at Empower Dr. Paolo Miotti US NIH, US Embassy, New Delhi at EMPOWER Professor Christian Burri Director, Swiss Tropical Institute at EMPOWER Prof. Marie Lindquist, Director UMC Addressing EMPOWER students at the Workshop on Pharmacovigilance Prof. Bruce Hugman Consultant, UMC, Sweden at EMPOWER Prof. Ralph Edward, Former Director UMC Workshop on Pharmacovigilance Mr. Sten Olsson, UMC Sweden at EMPOWER Prof. Ricardo Pietrobon and team Duke-NUS at Empower Workshop on Clinical Trials Protocol

  29. Thank you

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