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PREGNANCY EXPOSURE REGISTRIES: MONITORING RISK FROM DRUG EXPOSURE IN PREGNANCY. Kathleen Uhl, MD Pregnancy & Lactation Team US Food & Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation & Research May 19, 2005. OVERVIEW. Background Definition Types of pregnancy exposure registries
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PREGNANCY EXPOSURE REGISTRIES: MONITORING RISK FROM DRUG EXPOSURE IN PREGNANCY Kathleen Uhl, MD Pregnancy & Lactation Team US Food & Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation & Research May 19, 2005
OVERVIEW • Background • Definition • Types of pregnancy exposure registries • When and why • Uses of data from pregnancy registries • Benefits (what they can do) • Limitations (what they can’t do) • Challenges
BACKGROUND • 60 million women of reproductive age, in U.S. (15-44 yrs) • 10% of women become pregnant annually • ~ 6 million pregnancies • > 4 million deliveries
BACKGROUND (cont) • Pregnant women NEED medications • Enter pregnancy with medical problems • Develop new medical problems • Pregnant women USE medications • Inadvertent exposures to drugs in pregnancy are common • Exposure before pregnancy is known • Over 50% of pregnancies in U.S. are unplanned
BACKGROUND (cont) • At approval no data on drug effects during HUMAN pregnancy • Pregnant women are excluded from clinical trials • Risk data derived almost exclusively from animal data • Depend on post-marketing surveillance to assess HUMAN fetal safety • Historically relied on spontaneous reports • Primary concern is teratogenesis (birth defects)
BACKGROUND (cont) • Paradigm shift from typical post-marketing studies • Not looking at safety in the patient being treated, but impact on the developing fetus • Looking for a signal • With drug exposure during pregnancy it is just as important, or more important, to find that there is no signal (or no increased risk)
Published August 2002 • http://www.fda.gov/cder/guidance/3626fnl.pdf
PREGNANCY REGISTRY GUIDANCE • “How to” document • Planning and protocol development • Design considerations
DEFINITION • “A prospective observational study that actively collects information on medical product exposures during pregnancy & associated pregnancy outcomes” • Enrollment based on drug exposure that occurs before outcome is known • Birth defect rate in exposed compared to background rate or to specific comparison groups
“REGISTRY” • Problematic nomenclature • Not a “study” • A list of patients • Not protocol driven data collection and analysis • Broad in scope • Variability in amount and type of data • Patient satisfaction • Marketing uses
Pregnancy Registries Home Page The US Food and Drug Administration Office of Women’s Health Guide to Pregnancy Registries Promoting Healthy Pregnancies Promoting Healthy Pregnancies To help women make informed and educated decisions about using medicines during pregnancy, it is necessary to determine the effect of these medicines on the unborn baby. Pregnancy Registry studies are one way to do this. If you are pregnant and currently taking medicine--or have been exposed to a medicine during your pregnancy--you may be able to participate and help in the collection of this needed information. This Website provides a list of pregnancy registries that are enrolling pregnant women. Information about Pregnancy Registries What is a Pregnancy Registry? How can you participate in a Pregnancy Registry? Whether or not you should continue taking medicine during pregnancy is a serious question. However, if you stop taking medicine that you need, this could harm both you and your baby. Unfortunately, this Website cannot give personalized health advice, so please speak with a health-care provider who knows you, your condition, and your medicine before making any decision about the use of medicine during pregnancy. List of Pregnancy Registries enrolling pregnant women Learn more about taking medicines while you are pregnant • Information about Pregnancy Registries • What is a Pregnancy Registry? • How can you participate in a Pregnancy Registry? • List of Pregnancy Registries enrolling pregnant women • Learn more about taking medicines while you are pregnant http://www.fda.gov/womens/registries/general.html
TYPES • Voluntary • Patient • Physician, HCP • Manufacturer • Mandatory • Manufacturer – part of Phase 4 commitment
TYPES (cont) • Country-specific • UK Anti-epileptic Drug (AED) Registry • International
TYPES (cont) • Disease specific • Rheumatoid arthritis – OTIS • Seizure disorders - Antiepileptic Drug (AED) Pregnancy Registry • Allergy and asthma (OTIS & AAAAI) • Drug specific • Multiple examples
TYPES (cont) • Single drug, single company • GSK – Lamotrigine Pregnancy Registry • Single drug, multiple companies • Ribavirin Pregnancy Registry • Multiple drugs, single company • Merck Pregnancy Registry Program • Some companies think they are doing this • Multiple drugs, multiple companies • Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry
TYPES (cont) • Manufacturer • Biogen – Avonex (interferon beta-1a) • Contract Research Organization (CRO) • Inveresk: • Ribavirin Pregnancy Registry • Lamotrigine Pregnancy Registry • Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry • Scientific Organization or Academic Institution • OTIS – Organization of Teratogen Information Services • Rheumatoid Arthritis and Pregnancy Study • Motherisk Program (Toronto) • Antipsychotic Medicines during Pregnancy • Temple University • National Transplantation Pregnancy Registry
WHEN TO ESTABLISH A REGISTRY? • Most frequently and most feasible when product first marketed • Phase IV commitment • At any time considering both • Need for risk information • May be needed with a new indication or dosage form
GOOD CANDIDATE PRODUCTS • Likely to be used: • In pregnant women for conditions that require treatment • By women of child-bearing potential • Over conventional therapies (teratogenic) • Amevive (alefacept) • Treatment of moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis • Pregnancy category B • Live-attenuated virus vaccines • Varivax (varicella virus)
USES OF DATA FROM REGISTRIES • Change pregnancy letter category • Zovirax (acyclovir) [category C to B] • Burroughs Wellcome & CDC, 1984-1999 • 749 pregnancies & 756 outcomes • Pulmicort (budesonide) - [category C to B] • Swedish medical birth registry, 1995-1997 • > 2500 infants • Sustiva (efavirenz) [category C to D] • ~100 pregnancies – neural tube defects in humans consistent with animal (monkey) data
USES OF DATA FROM REGISTRIES (cont) • Provide summary of HUMAN data in labeling • Meruvax II (rubella virus live) • Provide a signal for further investigation • Bupropion Pregnancy Registry • Scientific Advisory Committee • Noted the repeated occurrence of heart defects • Agreed with plan for more rapid methods of accumulating data • Monitoring intensified and under further investigation
BENEFITS • Important step in building prospective HUMAN data sets on pregnancy and infant outcomes • Starting place to get handle on fetal risks • Monitor for suspected risks • Identify factors that affect risk • Provide an estimate of increased risk of birth defects over background
BENEFITS (cont) • Potential to establish broad margins of safety and provide reassurance regarding lack of fetal risk • Provide clinically relevant HUMAN data to help prescribers & patients make decisions about drug use during pregnancy and counsel regarding inadvertent exposure
LIMITATIONS • Best suited for big risk signals – major teratogens • Ability to detect that a drug is NOT another thalidomide is critically important
LIMITATIONS (cont) • Limited ability to: • Pick up more modest teratogens • Look at teratogenic effects on a specific organ system or specific defect • Detect increase in spontaneous abortions • Detect outcomes that manifest late after birth, e.g., behavioral or intellectual development or reproductive function
LIMITATIONS (cont) • Multiple registries may apply to the same patient who takes multiple drugs • Clinicians have short time and attention • Attribution of effect across studies is problematic • May take a long time to collect enough exposures
METHODOLOGIC CHALLENGES • Sample size • How big is big enough? • Is it feasible? • Data capture procedures • Source of information • Outcome of interest • Length of follow-up • Comparison group(s) • Internal vs. external
BROADER CHALLENGES • IRB review • Informed consent • Independent data monitoring committee • Heterogeneity of international registries • Data release criteria • Discontinuation of registry
BROADER CHALLENGES • Nomenclature of “registry” • Handling of generic manufacturers • How to further investigate a signal • Inexperience & discomfort with using this kind of data
CONCLUSIONS • There is no single study methodology to assess the complete teratogenic effects of a drug • Pregnancy exposure registries are: • An important component of overall post-marketing surveillance of the safety of drug use during pregnancy • One tool • Useful, not perfect • A place to start